• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Still a Part of Us

  • Stillbirth
  • Infant Loss
  • Become a patron
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

infant death

Mom Jess Talks About The Aftermath of Her Daughter’s Death of Fetal Hydrops

February 11, 2022 by Winter

Mom Jess is interviewed about the time after her daughter, Addelyn was born at 30 weeks and died shortly later due to a severe case of fetal hydrops, and what she did to heal, what helped (and didn’t help), and what she and her husband Patrick did for baby Addy’s memorial service.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):


Time Stamps:

00:00 Welcome
02:47 Grief shortly after Addy’s death
06:54 At work
12:11 Transitioning to a new home
15:44 Her sister
18:55 Memorial Service
25:51 What has helped
28:37 How Patrick and her relationship has worked
35:17 What not to say

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen to Jess’s birth episode of daughter Addelyn: Click here
  • Watch/listen to Tiffany‘s birth episode of daughter Khyana’s: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Go here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts.
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.
Baby Addy’s feet

Full Transcription:

Winter 0:00
Welcome, welcome, everybody. Thank you so much for joining us here at Still A Part of Us. We are so grateful, grateful grateful to have Jess here with us to talk about her sweet Addy. This is a place where we talk about infant loss and stillbirth. So please be warned that we are going to be talking about a lot of things that could be possibly triggering. So keep yourself healthy and happy, Make sure that if you shouldn’t be listening to this, don’t listen to it.

Winter 0:27
Once again, thank you so much Jess for being on with us today. I so enjoyed hearing Addy’s story. You’re gonna cry people I’m just saying. I would recommend listening to that episode. It was beautiful. It was so hard to listen to you. But it was so good to hear about it. So welcome again, Jess. We are so happy to have you here today.

Jess Hennessey 0:49
Yeah, I’m so happy to be here.

Winter 0:51
For everybody that is joining us just on this episode of we’d love to– can you give me a little bit of a recap? Tell me who Addy was and when she was born and how long ago she was born and passed away?

Jess Hennessey 1:03
Absolutely. So my daughter, her name is Addelyn Renee, so we lovingly call her Addy. She was born October 8 of 2020 and passed away October 10 of 2020. As of this date that we’re recording this, it’s actually been six months to the day that she passed. So we’re bringing more value and remembrance to her life today by talking about her.

Jess Hennessey 1:27
She passed away from a couple of very rare conditions, late term pregnancy conditions that were not detected. She passed away when I was 30 weeks and three days pregnant. After giving birth, she had pretty severe hydrops non immune hydrops. As well as kind of figuring it out after she was born. She also had a pretty significant left heart defect in her chamber called hypoplastic left heart syndrome, as well as underdeveloped lungs that were not detected earlier in pregnancy. She was alive for 26 precious hours, and she passed away in our arms.

Winter 2:06
It’s quite the story. So I once again encourage you all to listen to that. It was that it was just wow, it was just powerful. So thank you so much for sharing that. So it’s been six months. That is still very fresh. All this sadness and grief. I’m wondering how that has been for you since Addy passed away. Because I know that you mentioned on the other episode that there was some anxiety and there was some anger. But yeah, tell me a little bit about how the first little bit was and how it’s been today.

Jess Hennessey 2:47
Yeah, six months. It feels like a lifetime ago and it feels like it’s just yesterday. I feel like I’m in that really interesting transitional phase that six months. Very early on, after she passed I would say I experienced a myriad of different feelings without any control over the feelings. So very acute sadness and very strong anxiety. Then also a lot of anger that came, and it came in waves, it manifested in a lot of different ways for me, right? So my anxiety would come almost irrationally in my mind and it would take me to a really deep dark place that I would never even think of. This was my fault she passed away, it was my fault. Or if I had not done that one thing and then having a lot of anxiety and the physical parts in anxiety which I’ve never experienced. So, not being able to breathe properly in my body. Just kind of breathing which is not good when you’re trying to function and have work and life and jobs.

Jess Hennessey 3:47
Then I would say that those feelings specifically the anger has, slowly I’ve been able to control it moreover the last six months. I’ve been able to feel like all of this is coming on. I need to remove myself from a situation or, almost I’m getting to the point now where I can tell myself, I want to feel these things, but I can’t do it right now. Right? Whether I’m in a conversation at work, or I’m on the phone with somebody who and they’re sharing something happy with me. I’m like, I just need to tone it down for a second. But those same feelings are very much there. I still specifically have a lot of anger that comes out often. It just is. The anger just is and I don’t know if it’ll ever go away, but it’s getting more of a control over it. At appropriate times and healthier ways to release that.

Winter 4:37
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 4:37
Not just lashing out at people, or playing the blame game specifically with myself because I did that a lot. I was incredibly hard on myself. I still am, but yeah. So that’s how I’m feeling I would say today. It’s progressively getting better, but it’s never gonna go away.

Winter 4:54
Yeah, it doesn’t.

Jess Hennessey 4:57
You learn to live with it.

Winter 4:58
Yeah, you do. It just makes you kind of a new person. Yeah, I like the way you put it, though. You just said, I kind of have gotten to the point where you’re like, Okay, this is not the appropriate time for this feeling. I will acknowledge it at some point in time, but not right now, because I’m in the middle of doing this thing at work or whatever. So I kind of like that, because sometimes you do have to kind of figure out how to put them in check, but then also acknowledge them. Because when you don’t acknowledge them that that causes the problems, I think.

Jess Hennessey 5:30
I think the other feeling I’m having a lot is, which, at first, I think shortly after her passing, it didn’t hit me as hard. I know it was there, but missing her. Just missing her in all senses of the forms. Missing the what-ifs could have should have. Missing her physically. I mean, for me, I felt like my pregnancy was very much ripped from me. So I didn’t have an opportunity. Not in a sense, at least in my mind, that’s how it felt. So I didn’t get that closure of even being pregnant. So at times, I still just miss being pregnant. So all those missing her and that whole experience is still also really, I would say very prevalent right now.

Winter 6:11
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 6:11
Six months post.

Winter 6:12
Yeah. Well, I was gonna say you were, I mean, you gave birth to her at week 30 weeks. 30 weeks and three days, I think if I’m not mistaken. So I mean, that’s a good 10 weeks right there that you were missing out on that time. To have a big belly and just enjoy that, that is kind of a nice time. You were a pregnancy unicorn. So of course, you would have enjoyed it. So you mentioned something that I want to bring up. So after you had Addy, were you able to because you are working, you had just graduated with your master’s degree? Were you able to take some time off from work? How did that look for you?

Jess Hennessey 6:54
So I took three weeks off to work, which sounds like not yet not a lot of time. It wasn’t, I had every opportunity to take much more time off. I am an HR manager. So I knew I had all these different protected rights and there was state disability available. For me in my mental state, we were still very much in the midst of COVID. So I was able to work remotely. So I needed to feel normal, I needed for my mental health to have something to get up every day and to feel like I’ve accomplished something, and I’m still me. I’m still this person without Addy, even though she’s obviously changed every part of me, but I still have to just feel normal.

Jess Hennessey 7:39
So I actually chose to go back to work three weeks after and it was very minor work. It was not like a full scope job. My company at the time was incredibly gracious and allowed me to take on things as I felt. I didn’t speak to anybody. So I did a lot of work where it was, dealing with data or doing payroll, so still being an HR function, but not directly in the sight of people. They literally did not have very much communication about me. All of a sudden I was there and then I was gone. So not a lot of people knew about what had happened. They wanted to be really gentle with that, that communication. So I went back two or three weeks post her passing away in a remote function. Then I think after five weeks, I started going back into the office. That was right when things kind of ended in 2020. I would do a little bit going in person and seeing people about five weeks after but yeah, three weeks was when I started to go back to work.

Winter 8:37
Wow. Did people know at work that you were pregnant?

Jess Hennessey 8:43
Yes. I was the HR manager. So I was a very big part of the organization. I had a lot of visibility on a lot of different team members across the organization. Even during COVID I mean, I had planned the day when she was born and I had had my OB appointment. Then things kind of happened the way that they did. I was dressed up and I was ready to go to the office. So yeah, actually, I was on the phone with a manager saying, Hey, I’ll be in the office in 30 minutes, let me just get my quick appointment done and get to Starbucks. I’ll be there. So people were very much aware of my pregnancy and I was getting very big at that time. So people knew when she was due and everything. Yep.

Winter 9:22
Yeah. How did that go like when you did come back? Because I just remember some of the experiences I had when I came back and thankfully my manager was so good about spreading information, and just letting people know what had happened. So people were so gentle with me, which I was so grateful for.

Jess Hennessey 9:43
I think some of the communication came directly from me. So I had the other interesting part of me returning to work is I actually the day before she was born, notified my executive team that I was leaving the company we had bought a house in a different state. I basically gave them a four month resignation notice and said after she’s born, I just don’t plan to come back. So let’s plan for training my replacement. So, I think some of that communication came directly from me. I think some of it was just hearsay. I never truly stated exactly what happened. Besides that I was pregnant. She was very sick. Now she’s not here anymore.

Winter 10:28
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 10:29
I can’t wait to share some of this with them. Because I think all of them truly care about me and have the best intentions. They were so gracious to me at that time. I want them to hear the story now, so they can hopefully get to and then partake, because I’m still very close to a lot of them. So yeah. I just kind of wanted to put myself back to work and focus on work, and focus on feeling any type of normalcy that I could grasp. Because it was such a non normal situation.

Winter 10:57
Yeah, that routine really helps to kind of reset some stuff. Because Oh, you can sit and wallow. You could easily sit and wallow for a while, and it is not a good place to be so.

Jess Hennessey 11:13
Well I think it was kind of strategic for me and my husband. My husband and I. Because we were very fortunate that we partly I think because I work in HR, and I know how the laws are applied. We were moving in a couple months, right? We both gave notices, we had planned to have her and now she wasn’t here. But we still had a house that we bought. We had a new life that we were going to start because of her that was due because of her. So we ended up going back to work so quickly as well, because we wanted to bank up that state leave.

Winter 11:44
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 11:44
Once we moved to our new home in California, and we did. We both got multiple months off to just finally breathe, and we got it paid through the State. It was all medically certified. So part of us also, I felt like let’s get back to work. Let’s finish out this chapter with our dignity and our heads held high. Then we will come to California in our new home and continue to feel those feelings and grieve. We got to have that time.

Winter 12:11
Wow, that is so lucky. I just like yeah, that was great that you’re able to do that. I mean, once again, just to have a little routine, but then also to kind of plan being able to spend that time together. I think that’s great. Oh, that’s really good. Okay, so now that you guys are in your new home then. How has that been? I was gonna say that probably was a little bit of a reset too. Because there’s trauma, right? The trauma that was kind of associated with a different area, and then coming to California, and being in a completely different area. Starting a new I guess. How’s that felt?

Jess Hennessey 12:53
No, it’s one of the things that you and I spoke about a lot in the birth story. There were these little moments of things that are not so crappy. In a really crappy situation. Having a house that we already had bought. We were just waiting to close. I mean, it felt like this new chapter and this new life. We were able to not start over start fresh, necessarily, because of what had happened, but we got to basically rework some of those. Trying to come up with, we’re trying to, I guess, in our mind, gain a little bit of control about the next chapter and what that looks like. If that makes sense. So, we’re going to be able to start new jobs. Where necessarily, I could look, that gives me a lot of anxiety, because I now have to start over and that’s okay. But also I get to start over. No one really knows some of the history and some of that sadness. They didn’t have to live that through with me.

Jess Hennessey 13:52
So that’s kind of a nice starting point. We were able to get our puppy and that was a nice kind of starting point to have something to pour into love. Yeah, it has been really refreshing. We’re so close to my family. I live a mile from my sister who was incredibly important through all of Addy’s birth and one of my best friends, and she’s having her first baby. So I’m feeling like it’s all just really good stuff. It’s the good and it’s not a really crappy situation.

Winter 14:20
Yeah, yeah. That’s a great way of putting it.

Jess Hennessey 14:24
Yes, it’s been great. It’s been really great for my mental health. Because I am able to, especially the first month I was able to pour myself into unpacking. It was very difficult. I think we brought all Addy’s things with us. So we have this beautiful nursery that’s completely not unpacked and still boxed up. But I love going in there. I love just being able to sit on the floor and say, I’m gonna use this someday. And all of her things are there and I can’t wait to see how that looks. We bought this house to build a family and that’s going to happen, it’s just not today. So I think that first month was very therapeutic to have unpacking and putting things in their place saying, this is how it is today. I can’t wait to see the day where it gets to change. We expected to have a newborn in this house, but we will someday again, God willing so.

Winter 15:12
Yeah, yeah. That is so interesting. That is kind of how it happened. Like, yeah, maybe some blessings there. You did mention that your sister is pregnant. When I had heard that, that actually brought up some things for me because for a while there I did not want to go to any baby showers. Like, I’ll send a gift, but I’m not going to go to a baby shower. Do you know what I’m saying? So I’m wondering how I mean, cause I know you and your sister are so close? How is that playing out for you?

Jess Hennessey 15:45
My sister specifically and others– I have a lot of incredible family members who just had babies, or they’re currently pregnant. It was a very interesting feeling of being so incredibly happy for them. So much joy in and you’re living through that with them. While also feeling complete devastation, and sadness and heartbreak for yourself. That is a balance that I’m really feeling absolutely the last six months. I think I feel it the most with my sister.

Jess Hennessey 16:14
I had a co-worker who actually was a week behind me and my pregnancy, and she had a daughter. Her daughter is perfectly healthy. She’s here. That was a really difficult milestone. One of my other family members, my aunt, who had her first baby, and she was 12 weeks behind Addy. She also had a daughter, and she’s perfectly healthy. I have so much joy to give to them. Because I love being pregnant. I love pregnancy. It’s incredible. Also feeling so sad.

Jess Hennessey 16:14
I think my sister and I luckily, we’re very open with each other. Very communicative. There’s been points in the last few– She’s 20 weeks, actually, as of last Wednesday, and she’s having a little boy. There were parts where I would say I don’t feel connected to you. That was absolutely because I was not wanting to open up, or tell her how I was feeling either. So yeah, it’s been a really interesting balance. But being able to identify it and being able to say let’s work through it. I think it has been key for me, because they also want to talk about it with me, right? It’s not like she just disappeared either. She’s part of now their story and their babies stories. They’ll know about it, too. It’s been a really interesting balancing act, especially with my sister. But luckily, we are very close. We talk about things. She wants to talk about Addy still, and she was very much part of her birth story.

Winter 17:32
Oh yeah, she was so present. I just love the fact that she was able to be there in times when you were physically not able to be there. So I think that’s really good. Just kind of keeping that communication open. Then yeah, acknowledging that. It’s not going to be easy to be totally happy about things. But I love that you are, you have such great love to give to those other families. Those other little babies that have come along, or will come along.

Jess Hennessey 18:03
I feel like I have more love to give because I’m trying to provide more value to Addy’s life through loving others. I think that’s a perfect way of putting it.

Winter 18:11
Yeah, I love it.

Jess Hennessey 18:15
Yes.

Winter 18:15
That’s so great. So, tell me what have you done? I know that this is actually kind of a thing that people look forward to listening to or hearing about. I’m so excited that we have a videos portion now. Are there things that you have done that you have physically, like in any jewelry or momentos? Or stuffed animals or anything that you have to help you remember Addy? I mean, it’s not like you’re gonna forget Addy. But A lot of these things kind of show up and they help. I think having something physical helps. So tell me if there’s been anything that you, or Patrick have used to kind of have Addy around.

Jess Hennessey 18:55
Yeah, absolutely. Well, and one thing too, that we’ll touch on is her memorial service, because that has a lot of physical things to tie to that specifically. Just things that I have around me at all times. So I have a teddy bear that my sister gave to me. Actually it sparked a good friend of mine who was one of my guardian angels through this process. She’s lost a few early miscarriage babies and it’s awful. She told me one day, we also work together. I told her I’m like, I’m not sleeping anymore, partly anxiety and trauma and all these things. Very normal! She said you also miss her. It’s almost like you need something to cuddle. You miss her presence and my sister went and found this amazing company who has teddy bears. They actually make them the length and the weight of the baby who passed away. So this is my little Addy bear. My Addy bear weighs five pounds one ounce, which is what her weight was and the bear is also 15 inches long, which is how long she was.

Winter 19:57
That is cool.

Jess Hennessey 19:58
So this has been a huge Support for me, I cuddle it often, it brings me just a lot of joy. Sometimes it’s difficult. Sometimes I definitely cry my eyes out. I’m like, give me my teddy bear because I get angry. It’s been a vessel of just helpfulness for me.

Jess Hennessey 20:15
Then I also have some necklaces. I try to wear one piece of jewelry that reminds me of her every day. Currently, because it feels like some of my strength a little bit like in one of the pieces might take away. We’ll talk about it further. But it’s just like it’s, it’s empowering to go through the absolute worst possible thing you can imagine in your life and being on the other side. She’s a vessel for that. So I have a necklace on right now that says her name Addelyn Renee. Then I have a couple of other necklaces and some earrings that my family members have gifted me. With her birthstone, or somebody, a dear friend of ours gave me a balloon, which is part of her memorial service. So it’s a necklace with a balloon on it. Those are things I tried to wear at least a piece a day. So that when I feel that anxiety, or those feelings that are really difficult to overcome, I’m able to hopefully use that as a weapon of strength in my mind at least without words.

Winter 21:11
I love that! A weapon of strength. Yeah, because some days are just like, I just can’t, I cannot. I think that’s so cool. Yeah, I know I was like, yeah, I like that a lot.

Jess Hennessey 21:22
I have a lot. I use those a lot just when I’m channeling her feeling like I need comfort. I used to have those two things often.

Winter 21:30
That’s great. Tell me about your memorial service. Because we actually didn’t get into that too much in the first story. We talked about what you guys did after, but I didn’t even ask about the memorial service. I apologize.

Jess Hennessey 21:40
No, that’s okay. It was a really special event. I thought of it at three in the morning, when I was having an anxiety attack and thinking, I want to do something that celebrates her. Also, we were in the middle of COVID.

Winter 21:55
Right.

Jess Hennessey 21:56
There were a lot of things with limitations that we had. So many of my family and friends had wanted to provide support. So we actually have a really amazing pub and brewery right down where we lived in Washington State. They were just opening up that they had an area and event space for private parties. So you could basically book it out for the night and you can have a certain amount of people. So we decided to book it out and invite only our immediate family. Then we decided to have a Facebook Live balloon release for a celebration of life. We had picked out balloons that said forever in our hearts. They were biodegradable. So the environmentalist in me would not feel guilty.

Winter 21:56
Good job!

Jess Hennessey 21:56
We actually had all of our family and friends purchase the balloons prior to the event. Then we set a time. I had all of our family and friends across the entire country film them releasing a balloon and I had a lot of people actually put notes in the balloons, like I wrote a note to her and let that go. Multiple people just would write these notes or write little things on the balloons little things to Addy. At the same time, we all let them go and we all recorded it. We did it on the beach and next to this pub. Those are things I will forever cherish.

Jess Hennessey 23:10
Every year now I have more of those balloons, and I will order more. Every year we’re going to go. They were white. We will release this white balloon or forever in our hearts every year on her birthday. Anybody who wants to participate. Our family and friends, which I know they will, will remember her every year. So.

Winter 23:26
That is so cool. I love that so much. What a way to support and then also just kind of the remembrance. That is so great.

Jess Hennessey 23:38
She was born in October too.

Winter 23:40
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 23:40
Which is crazy, which is of course, which I didn’t even know the significance of that. So I think it’s just going to be every October, it’s just going to be something to hold on to and to celebrate.

Winter 23:50
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 23:51
Yeah.

Winter 23:52
Yeah, pregnancy and infant loss Awareness Month. That was–yeah. That’s perfect. Actually, I want to see a video of that now. Like, well, you’ll you I’m gonna ask you to send me that video because I just want to see because I bet it was cool.

Jess Hennessey 24:06
I have like 25 of them.

Winter 24:08
Oh I’m sure.

Jess Hennessey 24:09
I posted them to this Facebook group on the event page. So I can always go and look back. So many of my incredible family and friends all participated and they uploaded their videos. It just felt so special, especially during COVID because we all would have been together if we could. So I wanted to keep my family and friends safe, but we were able to have the immediate family on the beach with us as we released them.

Jess Hennessey 24:32
We actually did it a month to the day she was born. So we did it on November 8th. So it was kind of at that point I’d healed up from my C-section pretty well. I was able to be more– I could move around more and I was walking again. Well I mean I was walking after my C-section. Really like feeling right, more strength with my own body. I dealt a lot with body shaming issues after she was born. So with myself again blaming my body didn’t do its job and hating looking at the scar from the C-section. All of those things too. So it felt really empowering to be able to walk on that beach and release that for her.

Winter 25:08
Yeah, but that’s so great. I was thinking, like, Oh, they didn’t have a service or a memorial. But you did, you just thought about it in the middle of the night, because you wanted to honor her. I think that’s so great. What a great idea. What a beautiful idea.

Jess Hennessey 25:25
Thank you, and hopefully others are able to take away from that. It doesn’t have to be essentially during COVID and even post COVID. I know we’re so close, or I can feel it, we’re getting there. But honoring your baby even if miles away from each other. Right? The other thing is family in Kansas and family who were in Washington, DC and Alaska. We all got to do this together for her. So that was really special.

Winter 25:51
Yeah, that is really special. I think that’s a cool idea. I was like, I kind of want to try something like. Let’s just jump back really fast. I do want to cover something that it kind of ends up being a little bit of a recurring theme, actually. You mentioned, there was some body shaming for yourself. Feeling like your body had failed your baby, basically? How are you? I guess, how are you confronting that? How are you dealing with that? Are you seeing a therapist? Tell me some of your thoughts that you’re doing to try and combat that? I guess.

Jess Hennessey 26:29
I am seeing– Well currently as needed, but was very heavily seeing a therapist, both for myself individually. Also with my husband. So we did marriage counseling. That was volunteer. Like we wanted to do that.

Winter 26:43
Right. Yes.

Jess Hennessey 26:43
Because I refuse to let something like this destroy our marriage. I love you too much. She was created out of love and purity. So we did do a lot of therapy. That was one of the things that came up for me. I was fully anticipating a postpartum body. Like that’s almost like I was excited to be proud, like, I produced this incredible being. Then to have her not here with me, and to still have all of the postpartum stuff happen. Suppressing the milk and big scar from the C-section, it was incredibly difficult it still is.Once I was able to get some of my physical health back and being able to do longer walks. Doing some hiit workouts that really helped, because then I felt like I still have that strength.

Jess Hennessey 27:28
One of the things that really resonated with me, and I can’t share this enough is with Addy specifically. I know everyone’s stories are different. But she was very sick for a long time and it wasn’t detected. My doctor said your body is what kept her alive. Like you did that, right. So that was for me, I’ve been trying to embrace that more of I was able to carry her for the full 30 weeks. Opposed to maybe a lot of people with the same condition can only carry for 16 to 20 weeks, because they find out and the babies are sick.

Winter 28:04
Right.

Jess Hennessey 28:04
So she said, that’s a true reflection of how strong your body was. So I’m just trying to use that moving forward. Especially if I go down that tunnel of my body’s not strong enough. I can’t know all these things. I don’t want to be scared to get pregnant again. I could go down a very deep path. So I’m trying to look at it more of like, no, my body was strong enough to carry her for that long. To keep her here as long as I possibly could. So I’ve been using that tool a lot. That was something that my doctor said and my therapist said. You should really hone in on that piece because that’s really powerful.

Winter 28:37
Yeah, just a little bit of reframing there. Yeah, cause that’s true. You mentioned that they usually detected it between 13 to 17 weeks, I think. By then it’s I mean, the baby might have already passed away. Your body was keeping her alive. I think that is a great way to think about it and reframe it.

Jess Hennessey 28:57
Yeah.

Winter 28:58
Yeah. That’s regardless, it’s still hard. So you, you guys did go to therapy, you have gone to therapy. You have gone together as a couple. How has Patrick your husband dealt with the grief? This is also another recurring theme is that it seems like everybody says, Yeah, my spouse grieves way differently than I do. And it’s surprising. So I’m assuming it’s the same way for you guys.

Jess Hennessey 29:24
Yes, he does. He has grieved very differently. I think the thing that I’m really proud of us and we’ve been together almost 10 years. She was our first baby and very planned, very, very planned, baby. We both just looked at each other and we said we will not let this destroy us. We will do whatever it takes for the other person to make sure that person feels supported through this process. His grief form has been very quiet. He wants to not not move on because you don’t move on, but to move forward.

Jess Hennessey 29:57
The move to California and the puppy all those things. They were just aided for him. For me, I keep getting stuck back in certain periods of time. So one of the things that we have to continue working on and we are working on all the time is communicating about that. I’m not saying I want to talk to you for hours and hours. That’s why I have this fantastic community, but just hey today’s not a good day. I’m really having a bad day. You know why, obviously, you lived it with me. I think we’ve done a really great job of that.

Jess Hennessey 30:23
One thing I feel really guilty of, is with some of those feelings as both parties, one of the things that I brought up is, I have had a lot of anger. That’s something that is new for me. I’ve never been an angry person. But I will have days where I just get so stressed and immediately just lash out, or I get so sad. Then that turns into anger and he is the person I live with. He’s the one closest proximity and I feel so bad for him sometimes. But he manages a lot of that lashing and that’s not fair to him. So that’s another thing that we’re also working on. Which is a direct result from what we went through. But I think us going to therapy and just saying we’re on the same grounds, we’re just dealing maybe with some of the other intricacies of that a little differently. But having the same platform has been key for us and how we’ve grieved. Because yeah, we both agreed very differently.

Jess Hennessey 31:15
Yeah. Oh I like that. Acknowledging that he has kind of been the brunt of some of the things that he might be feeling. But then just being able to say thanks for sticking with me. Yeah, that’s–

Jess Hennessey 31:30
Oh he has. He’s now turning into six– Now we’ve been managing that for six months. It’s to the point where he can pull me out of it, he’ll look at me, like, Jess you’re doing that thing again. I know you don’t want to do that, but you’re doing that thing. I’m like, you’re right, and he’ll pull me out of it now. So it’s I think, gonna forever morph and change. It’s made our marriage stronger. When you go through a trauma like that. I just said I refuse to let this destroy us. Everyday is building on our marriage and the love that we have. This next chapter, so.

Winter 32:02
Yeah, it is so taxing on– it is stressing on a marriage. So it’s good to hear that you guys are working on it actively?

Jess Hennessey 32:12
Yes.

Winter 32:13
Yes.

Jess Hennessey 32:13
Yes. It’s actively working on it daily. It’s so easy. Yes. Because it is I can’t I mean, there was I mean, there were days after she passed where I didn’t want to talk to anybody. I just wanted to be by myself and you could easily go to that place. I still can, it is an active effort for me to bring in those I love, or to let people ask me about Addy. Because I could easily just go into this one. He’s my closest partner, my best friend. He’s right here living it with me and I could still isolate him too. That’s not what I want to do.

Winter 32:13
Yeah. Yeah. Yes. That’s just kind of realizing he’s part of this. He went through this too. So giving a little grace to our spouses, right, our partners, and all this too.

Jess Hennessey 32:46
Yes.

Winter 33:02
Okay. So tell me, you pointed out so many awesome things that people did for you in the birth story. I like, namely, your sister, your sister sounds awesome. She went above and beyond. I’m wondering if there were other things that she did, or anybody else that did. Or even said after Addy passed away that really stood out to you that helped. We want to offer ideas, I guess, for others who may be looking to help somebody that has lost a child. So what things stood out to you?

Jess Hennessey 33:37
Absolutely. So what really stood out was how close colleagues or friends would say, I don’t know what to say, there is nothing to say. But let me do this act for you. So it would be bringing a sandwich or, here’s a bottle of wine or, here’s just a socially distanced hug. They’re like, I can’t tell you anything, I can’t say anything to make this better, or for it to go away. It just is. I just want you to know that I’m here to support you. So I had a couple of close friends do that.

Jess Hennessey 34:08
I had a couple of close friends. For me, after the C-Section, I wanted to get back to being active because it was kind of that control thing with my body. I wanted to feel like I had some sense of control. I had friends just say, look, can I just walk with you? We don’t have to talk, can I just go on a walk with you. It was great for the friend and great for me because I needed it. I should have had a chaperone anyway, walking after a C-section. So that was really, really gracious of them.

Jess Hennessey 34:34
I think to just a few folks, mainly people I worked with, again, kind of in that sensitive environment, we just text me. Here’s a heart. Don’t say anything but a heart. That was perfect. It was so helpful to just acknowledge that there was presidence outside of the situation of people who truly cared. They didn’t have to say anything and there was nothing right to say there isn’t there still isn’t anything right to say.

Winter 34:56
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 34:56
So I think just small acts, whether it was bringing– I really wanted Jimmy Johns while I was pregnant and I didn’t have it. So bringing me a Jimmy John’s sandwich, or going on a walk with me. Because that was the only thing that let me feel human again during that time period after all of that happened. So those were really great recommendations that I’d love to share for others.

Winter 35:17
Yeah, that is also I will say the small things make the biggest impact I feel like. So that’s cool that you’re had a lot of support through this. Okay, well, on the flip side, then I want to know if there was anything that you would maybe just recommend people not say, or not mention? After somebody lost a child, because I know that everybody has, it’s different for everybody. But I’m curious to know, if there was something that really kind of rubbed you the wrong way. Don’t call anybody out.

Jess Hennessey 35:52
I will say I want to say this because I absolutely was guilty of saying this to others before I went through something this traumatic was, everything happens for a reason. That to me, I read Megan devisor, I guess I listened to her audiobook, it’s okay not to be okay. That was another gift. Somebody just sent me a book. They’re like, just when you have some time to read this, but it ended up being transformational. In her book she talks about kind of those actions and the intent is usually absolutely not negative. But sometimes people, when they go through trauma, you just don’t know how to react, or your first reaction is just an affirmation.

Jess Hennessey 36:31
That specific one really was difficult for me was everything happens for a reason. So you’re saying that she was made and was perfect and she died? That’s okay? Or that there’s a reason for that? Do I believe that there’s a reason for how I can make her life valuable and provide remembrance every day and make my life better? Because of her? Absolutely. Hearing that? Oh, well, everything happens for a reason. That was really, it’s still difficult to hear, because I’m like, she’s a perfect young, innocent baby. How is that? So, that one specifically for me? I know, there’s other affirmations as well, like, Oh there’s a plan for everything. I would like to believe that events have transformed me and we’ll continue to do so. Which is just again, providing value and remembrance to her life. But I mean, her dying like I don’t think there should I don’t know just that one for me is really difficult.

Winter 37:33
Yeah, yeah, it’s because you’re just like, what? No, yeah.

Jess Hennessey 37:39
I know, they don’t mean it to be ill will.

Winter 37:41
No, no.

Jess Hennessey 37:42
No, no, no. I know that it’s just that one for me was really difficult. Especially in a time when you don’t feel like you’re grasping onto whatever you can to feel normal, or to feel okay, and to feel some sense of happiness. Then to hear like, Oh, no, no, you’re supposed to go through this. Again, I know, that’s not that but, it’ll happen, and you’ll find out why later. That one to me was–

Winter 38:04
Yeah, cause you’re just like, really, no, yeah. I have issues with those. Both of those platitudes as well. So, like you said, you are trying to bring value in remembrance of her. Yeah, you just feel like so I was meant to lose her. Yeah it just does not sit so well. So. Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 38:27
So that one was really difficult to sit with. And I heard it quite a bit. And it continued. Part of me wanted to be brave, and just tell them hey I know you mean this in the best way possible, but this is how it’s perceived for me right now. Right? I never did, because they’re coming from a place of love and care. But yeah, be really gentle with that after somebody has had a significant loss like that.

Winter 38:49
Yeah. Have you had any kind of a-ha moments or any realizations about this grief journey? About grief in general about you, yourself? Yeah. Tell me, tell me if you’ve realized anything?

Jess Hennessey 39:05
Yes. So I would say this realization came about, I would say four months, post her passing. When I think about the worst thing that could have happened when getting pregnant and feeling that joy, the worst thing in my mind that could have happened is that I would lose a child and in life losing a child. That happened, I did. I lost a child and all these different things happened, of course. Intertwined with that, but that’s the absolute in my whole life, what now presently, in the future, what could be the worst thing is losing a baby. I faced the worst absolute thing you could face, in my mind, at least for me as a person, everything moving forward. Now I’m living my life with the sense of fearlessness because I’ve already lived through the worst thing possible.

Jess Hennessey 39:55
That feeling and I do believe that this was a gift from Addy. In some sense, I do that. Everything else, it’s like, Hey, I didn’t get that job or that interview didn’t go well, or, hey, we can’t afford that really nice car that we’ve been looking forward to. Or we have to sell our things because one of us lost their jobs, or there’s just so many things that it doesn’t matter. Like, you face the worst thing that could possibly happen. There’s this sense of fearlessness that I’ve been able to really hone during this grieving period, and will continue to, and I think it’s a gift from her. That feeling of, I used to be so attached to outcomes, and not such a planner. You can’t plan what happened, and no one can plan to lose a baby. I’m really proud of myself for being on the other side, six months later, to say, I miss her, and I love her. She gave me this gift of fearlessness, because I lost her. So that would be a-ha moment for me. She’s changed my life.

Winter 41:01
I had chills from that. That Is so beautiful, that she’s given you this really different perspective. Just realizing that it’ll be fine. You’ve gone through the worst of it. What a tribute to her, actually, your life will be attributed to her. So is there any last piece of advice or anything else you’d like to share with us today? About Addy about anything that’s helped you anything that we haven’t covered that I’m sure I missed?

Jess Hennessey 41:37
No, I would. So I would just say as a lasting thought, people’s lives continue to move forward. Even if they were to those immediate people during that acute period, or they were there, and they’re not. It’s not like their support has gone, but life moves forward. They’ve got things in their life that are moving forward. So finding little things to remember your child by and one of the things that I’m doing to honor Addy. My husband and I are doing this new house, we currently have a completely dirt backyard. So we’re getting to transform that and spend way too much money on a backyard. We’re actually making a garden for Addy. One of the things that somebody gifted us with a bench plate, and it has her name and her date of birth and death. We are going to create a garden.

Jess Hennessey 42:20
I always associated white and pink flowers, any kind of flowers with her being a little princess. We’re going to make a garden for her with only white and pink flowers. That’s something that every day I get to go and I get to love on it, and I get to care for it. It’s going to provide me with daily remembrance. When things bloom that to me is one thing that we’re doing, but that I cannot wait. We’re close, just out of money on a backyard, but we’re very close. That’ll be the first project that we get done. So yeah, that would be my lasting thought is whatever that looks like in your life and something to take care of daily. It’s for them because they would be here normally to take care of for you. I hope that she would have been here everyday to take care of and she’s not.

Winter 43:03
Yeah. Jess, thank you. That was beautiful. I love that idea of just having something daily to take care of and then remember you’re your child by.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: advice, early neonatal infant death (<7 days), infant death, podcast episode Tagged With: infant loss

Mom Jess: C-Section Birth and Death of Our Baby Addelyn from Fetal Hydrops During COVID-19 Pandemic

February 10, 2022 by Winter

Mom Jess recounts the birth story of her daughter Addy, from their planned pregnancy during the pandemic and her pregnancy being perfect until around 30 weeks. Jess tells about how she became more swollen and gained 22 lbs in 2 weeks, and one of her non-stress tests came back abnormal. They discovered that Addy had a severe case of hydrops, where there was a lot of fluid buildup in her body, and Jess also had developed Mirror Syndrome (mimics preeclampsia), where as Addy became sicker, so did Jess.

Jess and her husband Patrick decide on a Caesarean section, since Jess was getting so sick, so Addy was born on October 8, 2020. Addy was later diagnosed with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, where the left side of her heart stopped developing, as well as underdeveloped lungs, from either being too early or from the hydrops. Addelyn deteriorated within 8 hours of her birth and passed away peacefully, surrounded by her parents.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):


Time Stamps:

00:00 Addelyn Renee
01:49 Introduction of Jess and Patrick
04:38 Pregnancy
08:28 Anatomy Scan
15:37 30-Week Appointment
24:29 Mirror Syndrome
30:50 C-section
41:58 Saying goodbye
49:58 Spending time with Addy after her passing
54:04 Discharge and home
01:03:51 Autopsy

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen to Jess’s advice episode of daughter Addelyn: Click here
  • Watch/listen to Tiffany‘s birth episode of daughter Khyana’s: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Go here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts.
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.
Baby Addelyn’s hand

Full Transcription:

C-Section Birth and Death of Our Baby Addelyn from Fetal Hydrops During COVID-19 Pandemic

Jess Hennessey 0:00
My daughter’s name is Addelyn Renee and we lovingly nicknamed her Addy. So Addy or Addelyn Renee.

Jess Hennessey 0:03
I, you know, remember so clearly about her is she actually has my dark hair, had my dark hair. I threw out my pregnancy expected her to come out with really light colored hair like my husband and I did as babies. He still has really light, lighter color hair, and she came out with really, really dark hair.That was not how I pictured her when I was pregnant and it was such a surprise to see that.

Jess Hennessey 0:19
Welcome to Still A Part of Us a place where moms and dads share the story of their child who was stillborn, or who died in infancy. I’m winter.

Lee 0:23
And I’m Lee, we are grateful you joined us today. Please know that this is a story of loss and has triggers.

Winter 0:27
Thanks to our loss parents who are willing to be vulnerable and share their children with us.

Lee 0:30
If you’re listening to this podcast, just know that on our YouTube channel, there are pictures and videos that are related to the stories that are being shared.

Winter 1:02
Subscribe and share it with a friend that might need it and tell them to subscribe. Why? Because people need to know that even though our babies are no longer with us, they’re still a part of us.

Winter 1:17
Thank you again so much for joining us here today on Still A Part of Us. We are excited to talk to Jess who is going to tell us a little bit more about her sweet daughter Addy. This is Still A Part of Us and here we are talking about our babies and infant loss and stillbirth. So please keep yourself protected. Once again. Thank you so much for being here today, Jess. Can you tell us a little bit about yourself? Who are you? What do you do on a day to day basis? Where are you guys? Where are you based out of?

Jess Hennessey 1:49
Yes. So I am an HR Manager. I have been working in HR for seven years. At the time when it was, you know, I was pregnant. When she was born I was an HR Manager. And still currently am and during the time of my pregnancy and her birth, I was actually living in the Vancouver Washington area. So right outside of the border of Portland. Then my husband and I recently relocated to Sacramento, California, in January of this year, actually. So she was born in Washington, in the Portland area. Now we are in California, which is where I grew up. So we came back home.

Winter 2:28
Gotcha. Okay, that makes sense. Do you guys you referred to we, so is that you and your husband?

Jess Hennessey 2:35
Yes. Yes. And now our 19 week old Golden Retriever puppy, Kelso.

Winter 2:39
Wonderful, wonderful. And what do you guys like to do? Just like hobbies, things that you like to do on a regular basis and in your free time.

Jess Hennessey 2:49
We are big advocates of getting outside as much as possible. So camping, hiking, especially during the last year of COVID were huge activities, anything outdoors,we could get our hands on. We also really enjoy TV shows together. So you know rewatching a lot of Gordon Ramsay shows.

Winter 3:04
Oh!

Jess Hennessey 3:06
Yeah. So a lot of cooking shows, and fun kind of like survivor Shows like, you know, Wilderness, Naked Afraid. Anything where people are putting themselves in crazy situations. They’re like, I could never do that.

Winter 3:18
I know, I couldn’t I always freak out when I was like, Oh, that’s making me anxious. I’d be dead, I think.

Jess Hennessey 3:26
Yeah. Then the last few months have just been really all about, you know, we recently moved and we bought our first home and we bought our first dog. So the last few months have been really just centered around, you know, building our new home and getting it to where we want it to be and hanging out with our new puppy and being close to family. Finally, for the first time in my adult life.

Winter 3:45
That’s great. I think that’s awesome. I think we’re gonna get a little bit more into your move as well. So I do want to touch on that in a little bit. Just a little bit of context for our listeners. Tell us how long ago was Addy born?

Jess Hennessey 4:02
Yeah, so she was born October 8 of 2020. She passed away October 10 of 2020. Today the day we’re filming this is exactly six months from the day that she passed away.

Winter 4:16
Yeah. So I think it was kind of fun to like let’s do this is a nice way to honor her. I really really liked that we chose this day for you so.

Jess Hennessey 4:24
Me too. I cannot think of a better way to put value, or continue to put value to her life, you know to celebrate such a turbulent time and coming out on the other side of it and being able to look back at the last six months.

Winter 4:37
Yeah, exactly. So were you guys planning on getting pregnant then with Addy was that part of the whole grand scheme of things for your family?

Jess Hennessey 4:48
Oh man, her pregnancy. It was so planned. It is not even. I mean it was so planned to the month. At the time that you know my husband and I had so much going on, you know. We were approaching 10 years together, we were approaching six years married. I always joked with him, I really wanted to be together with him for 10 years and kind of live our young adult life. Then I really wanted to get a master’s degree before we had children and started a family.

Jess Hennessey 5:14
So, I got pregnant with her, we found out April 1, 2020. We had been very meticulously planning getting pregnant. Doing the whole regimen, six months prior to pregnancy and getting our bodies in good shape and good health. I actually graduated with my Master’s in August of 2020. I was almost six months pregnant. So we had planned it to be like, Oh, yes, I’ll you know, get my, finish my degree while I’m pregnant. Let’s do it, and then we’ll be in tandem with what our plans were. So yeah, she was very much, we set a month. And we said, This is when it’s happening, and we felt very lucky that it did. It happened almost immediately for us.

Winter 5:54
That is awesome. That is impressive, Jess, it sounds like you guys are very like we’ve got our stuff together.

Jess Hennessey 6:01
I would absolutely say I am very much a planner. My husband is more let’s go with the flow. Let’s see what life throws at us which in this case, he was obviously very thankful that like you planned this really well. I’m like, thank you.

Winter 6:15
Yes, I did plan that very well, didn’t I?

Jess Hennessey 6:19
Yeah, she was very much planned and very much wanted.

Jess Hennessey 6:22
Oh, that is wonderful. So how did your pregnancy go? Was it fairly easy? I mean, you were six– you graduated in August. I’m like, can you– I’m just thinking I’m like, oh, if I was pregnant while I was going to school, that would have been rough. So how was your pregnancy?

Jess Hennessey 6:40
You know, I knew what I was getting into, towards the tail end of school. And of course, we found out we were pregnant, just as stay at home shelters were put into place. So she was actually conceived prior to the kind of shelter in place happening. We didn’t really know how big COVID was gonna get. So in my mind, I mean, there were so many other obstacles that happened in my pregnancy, but I felt very thankful I was healthy. I had a very easygoing pregnancy. I think I experienced some, you know, first trimester symptoms, a little bit of nausea, exhaustion, and headaches, but nothing that didn’t stop me from working full time. I worked full time, even though it was in remote capacity because of COVID. I went to school full time, and that all became online. I actually felt like I was so thankful, like, wow. COVID and what happened what’s still happening is awful. But I got to be pregnant at home. Basically, I’m like, I couldn’t have planned this better. And this wasn’t even my plan.

Winter 7:34
Yeah, that’s a little bit of a silver lining, isn’t it? I just–

Jess Hennessey 7:38
Yeah!

Winter 7:39
It’s kind of as awful as the pandemic has been. There’s definitely some silver lining to that. So that’s good. I’m glad to hear that your pregnancy wasn’t too awful.

Jess Hennessey 7:49
No! You know, I was active. I went on walks almost every day. And yeah, I had no hiccups in my pregnancy whatsoever.

Winter 7:58
That’s awesome. So when you guys hit, like, how were your doctor’s appointments? Were you looking good? Was Addy looking good?

Jess Hennessey 8:06
Everything was normal. My doctors– during COVID, I went to not everything alone, they let my husband and for a lot of big milestone appointments. But–

Winter 8:19
That’s good, because I know that there were a lot of people that did this alone. And that is crummy. So I’m glad that he was there for some of those appointments. Great.

Jess Hennessey 8:28
Yes, he got to be there for the anatomy scan, we actually had two anatomy scans. Just because of some imaging that they could not see. Then we were able to see, but outside of that every appointment was very normal. I was growing and gaining weight appropriately. She was growing and gaining what she needed to do. And I felt good. I loved being pregnant. Everyone just thought I was just beaming. I just loved it. It was one of the best times in my life.

Winter 8:56
Oh, that’s so good to hear. You’re one of those pregnancy unicorns. Did you know that? That’s what it sounds like.

Jess Hennessey 9:04
It was just it was– I mean, it was just incredible. I couldn’t have imagined when I had put this plan in forth for me and my husband and what our life would look like. I just, I couldn’t have imagined how wonderful it truly would be right? You can’t plan how incredible it’s going to feel to have a baby kick inside of you, or to be so empowered to finish.

Jess Hennessey 9:26
I remember giving my final speech for my master’s program in front of a large audience on zoom, which was not how it’s supposed to be. But she was kicking inside me as I was giving this final you know, I mean, those are just things. It was incredible. And I loved every minute of it.

Winter 9:40
Oh, that’s so great. That’s so great. So you guys did go and do the anatomy scan at 20 weeks isn’t? Well, yeah, at 20 weeks, probably around there. Did you guys plan on finding out if it was a girl or a boy?

Jess Hennessey 9:54
Yes, we did. We actually found out with the first genetic testing blood work. She was 10 weeks old at that point.

Jess Hennessey 10:02
Oh okay,!

Jess Hennessey 10:03
We did all the genetic testing the first trimester. We actually held the results until the Fourth of July weekend because we wanted to be surprised with my whole family. She was the first grandbaby across the whole board.

Jess Hennessey 10:16
Are you serious? Oh.

Jess Hennessey 10:18
Yeah. So my in-laws, and my dad, my mom has actually passed away. So my dad like she was the first grandbaby in the whole family. We wanted to be surprised together that she was a girl. I genuinely thought she was a boy. So when I found out at 17 weeks that it was a girl, I was shocked. I was like, there is no way. I just always pictured her being a boy. So yeah, we had the genetic testing done for blood work. Then we were able to find out a little bit earlier than the anatomy scan, but we actually had two anatomy scans, one at 18 weeks and one at 22 weeks.

Winter 10:52
Okay. And those looked good. And I was gonna ask, did the genetic test, how did that look?

Jess Hennessey 10:59
Fine, everything was great. They didn’t see any chromosomal issues. Everything looked good. Same with the anatomy scans. We went for my first one at 18 weeks. They were able to get good imaging, except for they wanted a little bit more of her brain and a little bit of her heart. She just would not position correctly. It was not a big deal. They were like she’s really stubborn. So we’re just gonna come back in a couple weeks, and we’ll get those images.

Jess Hennessey 11:27
So we felt lucky, because we’re like, great, we get to see her twice, then almost a month later, we got to have basically a repeat. An hour with our baby seeing her. They got all the scans that they needed of her brain and her heart. There was no concern after that. That was at 22 weeks.

Winter 11:45
Okay. That’s great. It’s always kind of reassuring to have those kinds of time points. But I love the fact that you guys were able to get to see her twice, in a sense, right? I mean, you get to see her on the ultrasound, which is always I think it’s a special treat, actually.

Winter 12:01
Okay, so you’re, you’re going along, and you have defended your masters. I don’t know if that’s defended your masters, but you did your final presentation for your masters, and everything’s going really well. Can you tell me a little bit more of what happened then?

Jess Hennessey 12:16
Yeah, absolutely. So in terms of timeline, so I finished up my master’s degree in August, I actually came back to California for my baby shower. We had a really small get together. But this is where my family is from. We were able to make it happen even during COVID. It was everyone again, she was the first baby in the family. So everyone just really wanted to celebrate her.

Jess Hennessey 12:38
So at 28 weeks, I actually came home at the time we were building our house. So we had purchased a house in early June after we found out we got pregnant. It was a new build, so I actually was able to come into the house with my mother in law, my dad, and my sister. We looked at the house, it was now about halfway being built. I’m you know, being pregnant, and we got pictures of me in the front door that was incomplete. It was so fun.

Jess Hennessey 13:04
I had my baby shower in late September. Then I got home and at that point, so I would say very late September to early October, I definitely started feeling pretty significant third trimester symptoms. I became really swollen, a lot of pelvic pressure, a lot of back pain. At this point, I’d had no kind of concerns in my pregnancy.

Jess Hennessey 13:31
She wasn’t moving as much as normal. Which again, I know my doctor, she explained to me that hey, you know, things are gonna move a little bit differently in the third trimester. They’re a lot bigger, they’re not gonna have as much room. I’m 5’1. She started like, you don’t have a lot of capacity to begin with. So it wasn’t in my mind a big concern, but a little bit of decreased fetal movement, just not as you know. jabby kicking and still very active after eating so she would still move around with sugar and things like that.

Jess Hennessey 13:56
But yeah, I just started just getting really swollen and tired even more. I knew that was in my mind, at least, you know, that’s the third trimester. Right? Everyone says the third trimester, you get really tough, right? You’re past that glowing second trimester, and your body’s preparing for the birth. So I just attributed all of those things to I’m going into my third trimester.

Jess Hennessey 14:19
I remember trying to stretch at night and every night my thighs were more and more swollen. I couldn’t stretch as far as I remember telling my husband, you know, getting really uncomfortable. So I had seen my obgyn at 28 weeks right after my baby shower.

Winter 14:37
In person? Was it in person?

Jess Hennessey 14:38
In person.

Winter 14:39
Okay.

Jess Hennessey 14:39
Yup in person. I addressed the concerns of being a little bit more swollen. She actually had said that my belly was measuring a little bit bigger at that point, but nothing that gave her concern. I mean, even at my baby shower is still one of the things that’s difficult for me to hear. But it’s true is you know, some of my family and friends and they said this out of complete love. They’re like, wow, you’re really, really big for being 28 weeks. I had been so normal sized. And I mean, I’m like, Yeah. I mean, maybe she’s just really growing and she’s got long legs that we know of.

Jess Hennessey 15:10
So I definitely was getting bigger very quickly. And it was not a normal speed, essentially. And I was getting uncomfortable. So my obgyn just said, Look, at this point, I don’t have any concerns. You’re still walking, you know, we’re not really seeing any symptoms of potential concern for you at this point, or her. So we’ll just keep going through the program. And if things change, let us know. At that point, I started seeing my obgyn, it was on a two week schedule.

Jess Hennessey 15:37
So I saw her again, for a normal, just a normal appointment. That morning of my appointment, it was just a normal appointment. I remember feeling something was wrong, and I couldn’t pinpoint it. I did not think it was what had, I didn’t think it was as extreme as it was. We found out what’s going on. I just figured something was a little off.

Jess Hennessey 16:01
The night before I actually she was moving, but not as much. Actually my husband and I took out our doppler and we listened to her heart and everything sounded fine. She was moving just not as much I couldn’t pinpoint it.

Jess Hennessey 16:13
So I went into my obgyn that morning, the morning she was born, which was October 8, for a normal appointment, it was my 30, about 30 week checkup. I was 30 weeks and three days at that point. I just was feeling uncomfortable. I got on the scale, and I gained 22 pounds in two weeks. I knew something was very, very wrong.

Jess Hennessey 16:33
I was not one of those, you know, for me, I did not weigh myself frequently, when I was pregnant. I really wanted to let my body do its job. My obgyn agreed to that, because I was not, you know, I wasn’t gaining weight at a rapid–, you know, it was very normal, essentially. So she had no concerns with me just getting weighed at my appointments, we didn’t see a concern with that. So I knew something was very wrong at that point.

Jess Hennessey 16:58
I knew I’d been feeling more uncomfortable and clothes weren’t fitting like normal. Again, I just thought maybe the third trimester. But she was okay, she was moving, her heartbeat was beating. So I got back into the exam room and I just at that point, lost it and just broke down. You know, my obgyn came in and said, You know, that’s a lot of weight to gain in a short period of time, it’s obviously fluid. So we need to have a closer look at the baby and you.

Jess Hennessey 17:23
So we got her on a stress test. I am so grateful I actually recorded that thinking, I’m going to go home tonight and be able to share this video with my family. I did not know what was about to happen. I just didn’t know. I got a video of me and my big belly and the stress test on and I’m you know listening to her heartbeat. I remember thinking in that moment, like she’s okay, that’s what mattered, right? She’s okay, she’s here heart’s beating, she’s wiggling. But I still have that sense that something was wrong.

Jess Hennessey 17:53
So after the stress test, my obgyn looked at the results. And you know, I could see her face looking at that piece of paper, and I knew I could just sense something was a little bit more serious than we thought. She said, “Well we’re seeing some normal rhythm, but we’re seeing quite a few not normal rhythms. I listen back to the video, I hear it now. There were drops in her heartbeat.

Winter 18:17
Oh.

Jess Hennessey 18:18
Yeah. So we decided that it was time to get an ultrasound. So they decided to admit me into the OBGYN floor, or the birth center floor. Which was on the fifth level of my hospital. We had actually never been up there. It was like this kind of coveted you only go up there when you’re in labor, active labor. It was a brand new floor. I asked my obgyn if I should call my husband. She knew my husband, Patrick. She’s like, yes, you should call Patrick. He was at work. And again, it had just been a normal appointment. I was used to doing that.

Jess Hennessey 18:48
So I called Patrick and I said, you need to get over here. And I don’t know how long we’re going to be. So we met in the lobby, and we went up to the fifth floor together. I called my boss and I had some scheduled interviews that day. I just said, I’m so sorry, you need to take my calendar and I just don’t know what today is going to look like. But I should be home tonight. I remember just thinking in my head telling my family and my employer, I’m going to be home tonight. We’ll talk about it then we’ll figure out what I missed. I’m so sorry. You know, putting on the career woman part of me.

Jess Hennessey 19:18
We headed to the fifth floor and got admitted. They immediately started me on some IV’s which I’ve never had it before. It took like six or seven pokes in different spots on my hands. I just remember thinking like, Oh my gosh, I mean, it’s fine. This is the worst of today, which absolutely was not the worst day of being poked at least. But I finally got a couple IV’s in and they started me on fluids. Then the ultrasound tech came in and she spent probably I would say about 30 minutes on ultrasound and it was very quiet. Which had not been the previous experiences during my anatomy scan. She was just very quiet and could go after–

Winter 19:59
Could you see the ultrasound while she was doing it?

Jess Hennessey 20:02
You know what if I, my husband remembers it perfectly. I actually think at this point, I was starting to block out some of this, I knew something was wrong. I was getting that feeling. I remember looking at my husband more than the computer screen. I just, I don’t know, I didn’t know what I was supposed to be looking for. But I knew something was wrong.

Jess Hennessey 20:26
I guess the last ultrasound I’d had, she was 22 weeks and she was perfect. Right? That was the last time I saw her.

Winter 20:31
Right.

Jess Hennessey 20:31
It was the joyous moment. I just didn’t want to take away from that. So I remember, just almost trying to not look at the screen. It was fully visible if we wanted to look at it. I didn’t know what we were looking at. Then I remember at the end of the ultrasound, the tech said, Hey, you know, I want to show you guys something, and she was putting on you could tell, she was trying her very best to put on a smile for us. And she said, I want to show you her spine and her legs and her arms. She just said, I just really want you to look at this. I just and at the time, I didn’t know. And we’re like Okay, thanks.

Jess Hennessey 21:07
I didn’t realize she was trying to show us probably the last time we’d see her on the screen, at least in this form. She was trying to make that part of it at least still somewhat positive, which I appreciate so much. I’m so grateful she did that because then I looked and there was my Addy. She was perfect, right.

Jess Hennessey 21:27
I still, you know, couldn’t tell what was going on. I just thought, you know, she was kind of moving. I could feel her with the ultrasound, she didn’t really like being probed. She would move around with it. And I’m like, Okay, and so then, at that point, everyone kind of left the room and my husband actually called my sister, who is a nurse. She is not an OB, she doesn’t work with an OBGYN directly. She knows about the time that most nurses have during nursing school for, you know, birthing and care of infants. My husband called her and just said, Hey, like, this is what’s going on. I remember my sister saying if they give her magnesium, something is seriously wrong. Just you need to call me immediately because at that point, they had just been giving me fluids. So if they give her magnesium, something is wrong.

Jess Hennessey 22:20
So I kid you not two minutes later, in comes a nurse with magnesium shot. I said what’s going on, and they’re like, your doctor is gonna come in, and they’re gonna let you know. I’m like, okay, and I didn’t realize it, but magnesium at the time, but magnesium is to help the baby’s brain develop more quickly. They gave me a steroid shot as well. That’s supposed to help with their lungs for premature birth. So that’s why my sister had said, they’re giving her magnesium. I don’t remember if she had said steroids, but she just said then something is gonna happen. Something’s wrong.

Jess Hennessey 22:59
So my obgyn about 10 minutes later came in and she sat on my bed and she took my hand and she said, Addy has something called hydrops. I said, What is that? And she said, there’s quite a bit of fluid buildup inside of her. It’s pretty significant. It’s around her vital organs, including her lungs, her heart. It’s around her brain. She actually pulled up the ultrasound and showed us kind of the rim of her head specifically, I remember that. She said there’s about a two centimeter gap basically, between where her skin line and her skull. She said, That’s fluid. That’s not supposed to be there.

Jess Hennessey 23:44
I just remember being like, oh, and then she said the other thing. So Addy has hydrops. She’s, it’s very severe. We need to get her out. And I just said what I said she’s 30 weeks. I just remember at this point, almost like going into that, like fight or flight. Like what? My obgyn had two premature, beautiful baby boys. That’s partly why we connected and they were premature. I mean, she had twins and I really liked that about her. So that’s why I chose her as my ob. I just thought you’ve got this experience. You’re a mom of two boys that had twins. She said, you know, my boys were born at 30 weeks. She kept grabbing my hand and she started to cry, which I know as a doctor.

Jess Hennessey 24:29
She knew what was coming and she knew what I mean she must have known at that point. But of course, my hospital was a small local hospital not equipped to take care of and NICU baby in this capacity. So at that point, she said the other thing that’s going on is that you have something called Mirror Syndrome, which happens to about 50% of cases with babies with hydrops. It is when the mom is essentially getting sicker the sicker the baby gets.

Jess Hennessey 25:00
She said at this point, have you felt any type of tightening in your belly over the last week? And I said, Well, yeah, I mean, but I thought that was Braxton Hicks. Right? I’m in my third trimester. That’s normal, right? And she said, “No, I think your body’s been in labor for about a week. It’s in complete distress right now. You’re dying, if we don’t get her out, mirror syndrome is very serious. It’s basically mimicking preeclampsia.” And even though I didn’t have some of the other preeclampsia symptoms, like headache, and you know, my blood pressure at this point was okay, I was getting incredibly swollen. She said, “We need to get her out.” They said, “We can’t perform care for her here.” We’re going to send you to basically OHSU, which is the major hospital in Portland. They have a fantastic NICU unit.

Jess Hennessey 25:51
We said, okay, and she’s like, the ambulance is going to be here in five minutes to come get you and you have to go. I’m like, Patrick can’t drive me and she’s like, no, you’re you’re in critical condition as well. I’m like, Oh, okay. I remember at that moment, you know, looking at Patrick, and I said, How long are we going to be there? I asked my doctor, and she’s like, I don’t know. She didn’t have a lot of answers. I asked if the baby, for sure was coming tonight. She’s like, I don’t know, I asked if it would be a C section. She said, I don’t know. So I looked at my husband and said, I just remember blurting off, like, we’re gonna need our pillows, and I need you to feed the cat. I need you to pack me a couple of sweatpants. And you know, we didn’t have our hospital bags together and like, we’re 30 weeks pregnant, we didn’t have our plan in place at this point for being such a planner.

Winter 26:38
So they were just going to transfer you there? Then hand you over to I’m assuming maternal fetal medicine, or some the basically the doctors, they’re the team of doctors at OHSU?

Jess Hennessey 26:50
Yes, exactly. They said, at that point, they’re going to reassess me and Addy, and then they’ll be able to put a plan of care for me together based on what they also come up with, and some of the resources that they had there.

Winter 27:04
Yeah, yeah. Okay.

Jess Hennessey 27:08
So after that, I had to pee, of course, because when you know you pee all the time when you’re pregnant. So I went finally, for the first time in this whole event. I finally had a minute to myself and my husband came into the bathroom, and he was crying. I said, What’s going on? I said, we’re going to be okay. I said, you know, this is not the plan. But you know, we’re going to get her out. It sounds like there’s gonna be a plan in place, and we’re going to care for her and we’re going to the right place. And he said, I googled hydrops, Jess and it’s not good. He said, we’re going to need a miracle.

Jess Hennessey 27:40
I think at that moment, I knew, I think I knew that it switched in my mind from you know, she’s really sick. And I’m really sick. But it’s, you know, we live in 2020. There’s a lot of resources available to care for sick babies. I realized that this was a lot bigger than just that.

Jess Hennessey 28:03
Then we got transferred to OHSU, where they got me set up. My poor husband had to deal with multiple cars and his work and trying to manage getting the house together. He did such a great job. And I’m over there, getting examined some more so they have their own team. So we had about a team of six people pretty immediately taking care of me and Addy. So during our ultrasounds, they had the echo cardiologist for her to take a look at her heart primarily and some of her other organs had two doctors at that point. It all happened so quickly.

Jess Hennessey 28:42
They had two Fetal Medicine specialists come in after everything and say, you know, at this point, I think you really have three options and they said it doesn’t look good as of right now. So we need to move quickly. Option A is we can continue monitoring you and her things are moving very quickly and pretty significantly and at that point, they were actually able to measure that fluid buildup was increasing even inside me from the time I left my normal local hospital. to OHSU you could already tell that more fluid is building up. So they’re like this isn’t getting, it’s not getting any better.

Jess Hennessey 29:24
But we can continue to monitor and they also recommended at that point we would go in with my gosh, what are the needles called? It’s blanking– With a–

Winter 29:35
Epidural?

Jess Hennessey 29:37
Pericardiocentesis.

Jess Hennessey 29:40
I see what you’re saying.

Jess Hennessey 29:43
Yeah, to basically start draining her fluid and some of the fluid surrounding her in my stomach. And around the placenta, to try to provide some relief. They said, you know, she’s continuing to have buildup of fluid so, that would be a short term fix. They also said we could induce you. I was at that point just in active labor, but distressed labor. So even though my body was in distress, there was no movement in terms of dilation, or effacement. So she, it would be, you know, let’s reduce her, and then we could get her out. But it could be anywhere from 24 to 48 hours. They said your health is incredibly declining very quickly. So they said, those are two options, but we don’t recommend them.

Jess Hennessey 30:28
And I said, I understand why they said she’s going to pass away probably anyway, tonight, if we don’t get her out. So they said, The other option would be an emergency c-section. They said, that’s what we would recommend, we could get you ready for surgery and get her out. Then you can begin your recovery, and we can get you stabilized. Then we can assess her on the outside, because there were still limitations with, you know, the scans. They, at this point, had suspected potentially something could have been wrong with some of her other organs .

Jess Hennessey 31:02
So her heart, they couldn’t get a full visual. But while she, while we got some scans, you know, there were some concerns with her heart growth and prolonged development. They said at least we could assess her on the outside. It was without a question that that’s what we needed to do. And I said, get me ready for surgery.

Jess Hennessey 31:19
When I thought about getting pregnant, I absolutely knew that C-sections are a life saving surgery, and in my mind, I’m like, I just will never have that. Like it just never crossed my mind, even though it was always possible. I’ve never been in any type of major surgery before. And so I’m like, we’re doing this.

Jess Hennessey 31:43
My husband is updating our family. I didn’t even know where my cell phone was, at this point. I hadn’t looked at anything, which sounds so silly, like in the, in the moment, I just remember feeling so discombobulated and not oriented. At this point, I hadn’t eaten anything in the morning, since my first cup of coffee that morning, because my OBGYN kind of knew what was coming. She’s like, no more food and more liquids. I mean, she probably anticipated the C-section, so I was hungry. So all of those things. And I just didn’t feel ready to meet my daughter. I was like this is happening very quickly. It happened in a matter of six hours. She was born within eight hours after my appointment.

Jess Hennessey 32:25
So they prepped me for surgery. I went back and I mean, I think a C-section if it wasn’t something that we were ready for mentally it was something Patrick and I we hadn’t discussed or what that looked like, I don’t even think he understood really what a C section was. I mean, we were still finishing our birth classes. Right. So yeah,

Winter 32:47
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 32:49
So he didn’t know and he remembers the sounds very vividly. But we got her out. I remember them holding her up in front of me and looking at her for the first time. She was perfect, but she was so sick. Her ears were so swollen. A little face. I mean, she looked like a newborn baby. She did not look like she was 30 weeks. She had 10 perfect toes and 10 perfect fingers. They told me she’s a big kid. And we all kind of joke in my pregnancy. She had longer legs, but she looked like a full size baby because of all the fluid right?

Winter 33:39
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 33:41
They immediately took her way. I remember Patrick asking me, what do you want me to do? I’m like, go with her. Like, go and he said okay, and he followed them into the NICU when they started. I know she was breathing, but not very well. So they were doing some resuscitation with her.

Jess Hennessey 34:03
Then they were working on me. I remember the doctor, the surgeon, she was so wonderful. After everything was done and I was of course very loopy, disoriented and in shock. I was shaking and she put the curtain down and she’s like, I want you to know, I did a standard bikini cut basically. I said okay, she’s like, it means that you’re likely going to have healthy pregnancies and potential vbacs in the future. I just remember her saying that because this whole team of doctors they all knew what was going to happen. They all knew and they just were all trying to give me comfort in their own way. I remember being so appreciative.

Jess Hennessey 34:38
So yeah she was in the NICU and they got me. They got me into the postop room and Patrick was able to come visit while I was still waking up from surgery and kind of getting myself oriented. He would be bouncing back and forth between the NICU room and coming to see me. I mean the next 20-26 hours. It’s something yeah. It was really difficult. It was having a lot of people coming in and out to check on me at that point. Thankfully, after I gave birth, I became more stabilized. Because I think in this whole scheme of things, you know, Addy was very sick. We knew, I mean, I think at this point, there’s a pretty well rounded decision that she needed to get out, and she was probably going to pass away, but we’re at least going to give her a fighting chance.

Jess Hennessey 35:39
Based on statistics, and the doctors, you know, telling me it was less than a 5% chance of how severe her hydro drops were. Then if there were other concerns on top of that, which there was that we found out, she was born and assessing her. I mean, it was just very, very slim. Even if it was any type of chance to get through these hurdles, her quality of life would be very, very poor. She would likely never, ever be able to walk. We didn’t know her brain functionality. I know she knew who I was.

Jess Hennessey 36:15
I got to meet her about two hours after she was born. Officially meet her. She was in one of those little NICU beds with the heating lamps and they took it off for me to see her. I remember putting my hand right next to her fingers. And at this point, she was not sedated. So they resuscitated her but she was not sedated. So I was able to still, you know, she was still wiggling a little bit. I remember putting my finger right by her hand and saying, Hi, Addy. She just squeezed it. It was the most magical moment. She knew exactly who I was. You know, they spend how many months in your belly listening to you. As an HR manager, I did. I cannot even tell you how many phone interviews and conversations I would have and over zoom, and she was right there for it all. She was my little buddy in quarantine. Being alone and pregnant for the first time. I always had her. So yeah that was really the last time I saw her up until she passed away.

Jess Hennessey 36:16
There were some steps in place, which I don’t— I have no ill will towards the hospital. They were incredible. I still am very close with some of the nurses who took care of me and were there for me. But I was trying to get through having a C-Section A major surgery. They wanted me to walk and they needed me to go to the bathroom and things like that. As soon as I could hit some of these milestones, I could go see her again. My husband was able to go see her as often as he wanted. So he’d often bounce back and forth.

Jess Hennessey 37:50
Then they moved us from you know, we were in the mother’s quarters. When we first got kind of wheeled into our room for the night. All I heard was the crying babies and I said I can’t be here. They were able to move me. So I got this kind of private quarters in the hospital, which still is very quiet. That night, it was just a lot of monitoring me because I was trying to get stabilized and Patrick going back and forth between visiting me and Addy. She was breathing at that point. They don’t like to put a couple chest tubes in. We didn’t know the extent to what else was going on. Besides they were trying to drain fluid at this point.

Jess Hennessey 38:29
Then the next day, which was the 9th. The next morning, I woke up to my sister who flew in, she lives in California, but she actually was on vacation in Boston at this point. So that was another whole— Yeah. Because again, we had planned everything, you know, up until we thought her due date, really. So she had planned this trip. I woke up to my sister in the hospital room. I just remember saying how are you here? We’re in COVID.

Winter 38:59
How did they get you in?

Jess Hennessey 39:02
My sister and I were very close. She’s a year and a half younger than I am. Which does not matter. But she’s a little bit younger than me. Our mom passed away three years ago, and we went through that together.

Winter 39:02
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 39:14
I actually live a mile away from her now. So we purposely bought our home and—

Winter 39:18
Oh! That’s great.

Jess Hennessey 39:20
Yeah, we live a mile away from each other because we always imagined raising our children together and being so close. I woke up to my sister and she was able to tell me that they made a hospital exception to let her in, which is incredible. She actually had just gotten back from the NICU. She got to be with Addy. They could only allow one person at a time, but she said I’ve seen Patrick and I saw Addy. She’s beautiful. She’s perfect.

Jess Hennessey 39:49
The next part of that day was spent with a lot of specialists coming into our room. You know, hey, I’m so and so I am at Addy’s cardiologist or different specialties, and we found out that she was very sick. Her heart was very sick as well with something called hypo plastic left heart syndrome. Essentially, her left heart chamber had stopped developing, and it wasn’t detected at 22 weeks, which is incredible because it is usually something that’s caught usually between 13 to 17 weeks is what the doctor explained. So normally, it’s that in itself as a terminating illness, you have to have heart transplants if the baby’s healthy enough, and she obviously was very sick with hydrops. Even though they were how I kept trying to understand, as I said, she’s got these and her lungs were underdeveloped. So I said, all these different things were happening. And I said, but they’re different things. So it’s not like one caused the other it’s not good causation. I just kept trying to ask those questions and understand, and they said, correct. So she has had a heart condition, likely since conception that was undetected, her lungs then stopped really forming probably in the last, three to five weeks, because then she developed hydrops. They’re all kind of interrelated to just that she’s sick, but it’s not like one caused the other.

Jess Hennessey 41:12
That was really hard for me. I remember just trying to understand because I was so—everything was so confusing. I was so lost, and you know, eight hours prior, and now the next day. I mean, she was healthy in my belly, and now it’s not healthy anymore. She’s not well, and so yeah.

Jess Hennessey 41:28
We have a lot of specialists coming in telling us different things. Essentially, you know, we were at this point where she was making some very small improvements, and then would take 10 steps back. And essentially, they just said, Look, you know, we will continue giving her and you the best care possible until it’s not. It’s not appropriate anymore. I said, Okay, I said, my biggest thing is, she can’t suffer. I said, I’m her mom, like, she can’t suffer. They agreed. So I said, If I asked you how she is, be honest with me, and this was her doctor, he’s amazing. And he said, I promise you, I will.

Jess Hennessey 42:09
So it was nine o’clock the night post surgery. So it was the ninth of October. At this point, I can see my cell phone, my sister’s there and my husband’s there. They’re updating the family, which is all that mattered. I didn’t realize all of my in-laws had driven into the hospital. They were all five hours away from us. They were all there, but they could not physically get in the hospital.

Winter 42:30
Right.

Jess Hennessey 42:30
Because of COVID.

Winter 42:31
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 42:31
So they’re literally on the outskirts of the hospital hanging out in parking lots and bringing my husband and my sister food. Jenny, my sister, Jen. Jen, and Jess, my mom, and dad were very creative. She would just kind of go run and eat and go check on me and go check on Addy. It kind of became this circle thing.

Jess Hennessey 42:48
I of course could not go see Addy until I met those milestones. When I did, it was amazing. It was about nine o’clock at night. I was able to go see her. They wheeled me down. She at this point was sedated. So she wasn’t moving. She still was all toasty in that heat thing. I remember saying I need to stand up and they’re like, you just had surgery I’m like I don’t care. I’m like, I want to get as close as I can to my daughter because I don’t know how much time I have left. So I stood up and I was able to talk to her. I actually had a little cuddle lovey that they gave me which I thought was very sweet that they said just you know, cuddle with this. We’re going to give it to her so that she has your smell. We did that. So she had my cuddle little lovey.

Jess Hennessey 43:32
At that point when it was time to say good night, I was really tired. I needed some more medicine. I was in a lot of pain. So they got me back up to the room. I got some medicine, my sister Patrick and I went to bed. Then at 12:26 they woke us up. The nurses came into my room and said, it’s not good, something’s not going, it’s not good. I’m not, it’s not well, it’s not good. We need to get down to the NICU right away.

Jess Hennessey 43:57
I just remember postsurgery flying out of my bed and adrenaline is rushing in. They put me in a wheelchair, they wheeled me down right to the NICU. My sister had to stay outside, but they let Patrick in. Because they only allowed one person and of course in this instance her doctor, who I am so grateful for. I looked at him in the eyes and I just knew. He said I could put another chest tube in. Another chest tube and at this point it was five chest tubes. And I said no. No. My husband and I looked at each other. I just remember saying I’m not ready. I’m not ready to say goodbye

Jess Hennessey 44:41
But as a parent, and I waited— Sorry. Sorry Winter. Okay.

Jess Hennessey 44:51
I’m a parent and being a first time mom. She was my first baby. I couldn’t ever let her suffer. I knew she was suffering. This was not giving her the life she deserved or the quality of life that she deserved. So we said just stop. And they did. They took all her chest tubes out, and they were able to hand her first to me. And it was the first time I held her. She was so perfect. The nurse had told me she weighed five pounds one ounces. So I got to hold her. Then they handed her to my husband. Actually, that is the first baby he’s ever held, which is very, very special. So she will always be the first baby he’s ever held.

Jess Hennessey 45:37
Then the hospital again, we’re just incredible. They let my sister into the room. My sister got to hold Addy while she was still alive. So the three of us got to be with her. It was incredibly peaceful. If you can imagine being in turbulence, and having that moment with her was just, I mean, it was my goodbye. But we got to hold her. And she passed away. Somewhere in between me and Patrick. Patrick and I, she said she passed away. But she was pronounced deceased. She was pronounced dead in my arms. We got to meet her. We got to hold her and she passed away in our arms. Yeah. So that was her birth. She’s perfect.

Winter 46:33
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 46:34
She has, you know, it’s amazing how life can change so quickly. Eight hours is, you know, from the time of her diagnosis to the time she was born. And of course, all of the aftermath following, but in those few moments with her. Some people don’t get that opportunity and I did. And so I’m very lucky. She was perfect.

Winter 47:04
Jess, can you tell me how you guys chose her name because it’s so beautiful?

Jess Hennessey 47:08
Oh, thank you. Absolutely. So really, her first name is a really fun story actually. So we—

Winter 47:15
Oh is it?

Jess Hennessey 47:15
Yes. So I told you, we thought she was a boy. So we had all of these boy names lined up. We’ve been thinking of boy names. Really since you know we first met. We never— Yeah, my husband has brothers. There’s just a lot of boys in the family. So we just kind of assumed we’d have a boy. So there’s an app called Kinder and it is a name app. Similar to Tinder.

Winter 47:40
Yeah?

Jess Hennessey 47:41
Where you swipe left, it’s exactly what it is. Swipe left for a name that you like, swipe right for a name you don’t. You match with your partner’s phone. So if it’s a name that you both matched on, it’ll Yeah— So we and I don’t remember, I must have heard that from one of the mom apps or the mom podcast, I was listening to you. I’m like, this would be fun. So we were actually on our living room couch one night. This was before we found out she was a girl and the only name that we matched on that was for a girl was Addelyn. So yeah, the only name matched on so we’re like, great. So if it’s a girl, it will be Addelyn and it was so fun how we came up with that. Now her middle name Renee is actually my mother in law’s middle name. So it is a name a namesake for the family.

Winter 48:27
Right.

Jess Hennessey 48:28
My mother in law is one of the most important people in my life. I could not think of anybody more deserving to have a name and baby named after her. So that’s where Addelyn Renee came in. So yeah, Addelyn was really fun and Addy. We just thought that was so cute. You know, I can picture her so perfectly, a little Addy. You know her blonde pigtails is how I pictured them running around and crazy.

Jess Hennessey 48:52
Yeah cause she would be the only girl really and the first grandbaby. So that was really exciting for everybody. Just Oh, it’s a girl. And, you know, she’s the first and yeah, she would have been. She would have been a little princess. I just imagined her like that. Getting anything she wanted. My husband always said, oh, we’re in trouble. Because you know, she’s gonna get whatever she wants. And so yeah, that’s how we came up with her name. And I love her name.

Winter 49:20
I love it. It’s so cute. I just love the story behind it. That’s so great.

Jess Hennessey 49:27
So I read this app. I’m like, geez, and so of course, we still have all of our boy names. Don’t have another girl name, but we have Addy.

Winter 49:37
That’s good. That’s good. Oh, man, that is? That’s great. Tell me a little bit more about after Addy passed away though. So you guys, she was in the NICU. So I imagine you guys were able to stay there for a little bit? What was the policy? I don’t know the policy at OHSU.

Jess Hennessey 49:58
We were able to stay and spend some time with her. Then they asked if we wanted a professional photographer to come in. They had a volunteer service. We said absolutely. They were able to actually capture some pictures which are so treasured. Her little toes and her little feet, her hands and her fingerprints. Then she also, the photographer was able to capture some pictures of us holding her while she was still alive.

Jess Hennessey 50:23
Then after she had passed away, I don’t know if I was in a state of shock, necessarily, or just, I mean, I was still feeling all that pain. I think at this point, it was probably more hard, you know, emotional pain and physical pain. But they said, Do you want to go back to the room for a little bit, and we’ll bring her to you. I said, I would actually love that. To have her in an environment that’s not so busy with the doctors and the nurses kind of standing around.

Jess Hennessey 50:50
So my sister actually was able to stay with her while they dressed her. They asked if there was a specific outfit we had brought, which we didn’t. Even though I had the entire nursery set up and all of her clothes, they were all at home. I already had everything ready to go. But of course I didn’t. My poor husband, when I told him to pack everything, you can. He didn’t pack that because we didn’t know.

Winter 51:10
Yeah, of course.

Jess Hennessey 51:11
They did have some nice options. So we were able to choose an outfit for her. Actually, my sister stayed and was able to change her diaper for the first time and dressed her. So her Auntie had that privilege. I am so grateful.

Winter 51:25
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 51:25
She was absolutely my sub in while I was not myself and physically not doing well. I was still recovering from ear syndrome and all that. So then they were able to— about I would say an hour later, they got the pictures of her hands and her feet. They got the prints. They were able to do a mold for me of her feet and hands. So they did all that.

Jess Hennessey 51:45
Then they brought her to me. Then surprise, the hospital made another exception. My mother in law and my father in law. So my husband’s mom and dad. They had been kind of on the outside of the hospital. They let them both in to meet Addy.

Winter 52:01
Oh!

Jess Hennessey 52:02
So they got to both be with Addy. She had already passed. But my mother in law got to hold her and be with me to comfort me and Patrick. That was really a difficult moment, of course, to be in that room with them because she was the first grand baby. I think we all— Yeah, so. But we did get to spend some time together with her.

Jess Hennessey 52:23
They really gave me unlimited amounts of time. I don’t remember how much time had passed. It was all just very, you know, I held her and was with her. But at some point, it just felt like it was time to say goodbye to her body because her soul, her soul was perfectly perfect. So, they took her. At that point, they asked Patrick and I if this was okay. We said yes. Then it was just Patrick and I. I’m pretty sure they gave me some really great sleeping meds because I was able to sleep a little bit.

Jess Hennessey 52:56
Then the next morning, they asked some of those logistical questions that you don’t think about when you get pregnant. Like would you like to cremate your daughter? Or do you want to have her buried? I think COVID posed an entirely new element to the conversation. Like we might need to embalm her or preserve her. Those are just things that you don’t want to hear as a parent and going through this horrific experience. So OHSU is also a school for the it’s not a university, but it’s a school study program. They do a lot of Medical Teaching.

Winter 53:33
Yes, yeah.

Jess Hennessey 53:35
Yeah, so they asked if they could keep her organs actually, for studying. because babies with hydrops are still pretty rare. Then to have all these other kinds of things going on with her organs, they asked if they could preserve them to study them. We said yes. We couldn’t imagine a better place for her to hopefully help other future babies. It would be the idea and continue to give value to her life.

Winter 53:58
Yeah, that is Oh, that Wow. Okay, that’s so great. I just yeah.

Jess Hennessey 54:04
So we were able to, we consented to having them preserved her organs. And then we had the rest of her cremated. I remember, you know, just like during that period in the hospital, we’d try to make light of Oh, well, this is a less crappy thing that happened. One of the less crappy things that happened was this incredible funeral service home, anybody who lost a child, they would do all the services 100% free.

Winter 54:31
Oh!

Jess Hennessey 54:31
So I just remember thinking like how? I didn’t even think that was people— when you’re a parent, and you’re so devastated. You lost your baby and to just have some type of like, wow, there is still good in this world and how I felt at that moment, at least. So, you know, we talked through the logistics of transportation. They said they’ll come pick her up and this is where she’s going to be. She’ll be safe here at the hospital. We’ll move her there. Then you guys will go and find paperwork with her there. You can ask them whatever you need. They could do more prints for you guys. But it’s typically about a week to two week turnaround until you get her ashes.

Jess Hennessey 54:32
I had all of my family there. So I wanted to be at that point admitted out of the hospital or discharged as soon as possible. So I was actually only in the hospital for another day.

Winter 55:02
Oh for a C-section?

Jess Hennessey 55:21
Yeah, yeah. They let me go home. I think it’s partly and also at that point, I’d made huge recovering strides with my mirror syndrome. I was losing fluid like crazy. In fact, in the month after her birth, I lost, I think, 60 pounds.

Winter 55:33
Oh!

Jess Hennessey 55:34
All of it was fluid. Yeah.

Winter 55:36
Oh, my goodness.

Jess Hennessey 55:37
Yeah, it was I mean, so I was losing weight rapidly with all the fluids coming out. I think so too, because my sister had been there. She was a nurse and she ended up living with us for three weeks after Addy had passed. My mother in law was there, they felt comfortable discharging me. I had made all the right strides.

Jess Hennessey 55:54
After that, I just wanted to be home. At that point, as difficult as I knew that going home would be to her things, all of that without her. So I was able to get home discharged as soon as possible. I think within a day or two, we went to the funeral home, and we signed paperwork, and they did some more prints for us. They didn’t ask if we wanted to see her there. I wish I would have thought about that. Because I know that some funeral homes allow you to go see babies. Your baby or family or loved one after they’ve deceased that passed away. I wish I had asked maybe to see her. I would have liked to have seen her one more time, but I didn’t .

Jess Hennessey 56:34
They were incredibly kind. My sister and I went online. We found this amazing place in Maine who did custom urns. We were actually able to get her feet and hand next to her name on her urn. So it’s actually her life size hand and footprint which is incredible.

Winter 56:52
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 56:54
They were able to rush ship so that way we could get it to the funeral home. We were able to have her and you know, within a week, we went and picked her up. We actually my dad, he offered to pay for things that needed to be paid for which were 100% free. One thing we did buy is her colors. In my mind, like I said she was a little princess, were pink and white. My whole baby shower. I’m not the girly girl type. So it was always this joke. Like I never wore pink in my life. Then all of a sudden I have pink flowers around me. We’re gonna make a garden outside of our new house that is pink and white flowers only. My dad actually bought this beautiful little metal flower that was pink, and we have some of her ashes stored in there as well. That’s a little bit more mobile.. It’s a little bit more mobile.

Jess Hennessey 57:44
So we were able to donate her organs to be studied, and we decided to have her cremated and we actually kept her in her safe box. We did not take her out and actually have her here until we moved into our new home. So that was the first night we moved in. That was a big moment for all of us. We took out the urn, and she was here with us. So yeah.

Winter 58:07
Wow. So many— That was hard. I was like, I don’t know how you guys did it? I don’t know how you did it. I am sure that that was very, I guess I kind of want to know how you were feeling after she passed away was it— I’m sure that there was some gratitude for being able to show her off to your family since they were able to come in which is so great. But were you also feeling— I mean, I guess tell me how you’re feeling after all of everything. Because it is just a whirlwind sometimes. It’s just like how do I feel about all of this that just happened?

Jess Hennessey 58:46
I was, I think, first just very numb. I tend to, you know, when horrible things happen. I tend to go into what I call a kind of automation mode. So I remember coming home and wanting to just clean my house and pack up her things and just, I don’t know, feel some type of normalcy. So I was like, numb and wanting and seeking normalcy.

Jess Hennessey 59:12
Then I became incredibly sad and actually very anxious. In the days following her passing I had some incredibly severe anxiety attacks, which was the first time in my life I’ve ever suffered through anxiety. I remember , you know, we were talking about vitamins my sister and I something so miniscule, and she had said Oh, too much potassium, you know, could cause heart defects. It was not that intent, but I immediately just had a panic attack. What if I did this right? What if that’s what caused this?Or, I was cleaning the showers when I was pregnant once and and oh my gosh, what if that chemical caused this? Or even I was so careful or that one glass of wine I had, you know a week before my two week waiting period. What if that caused this? I just remember having a lot of feelings of this is My fault I caused this. Then having that sadness of what if I did cause this? What if this was my fault, and it was all of this heartbreak and trauma in her life, it was my fault. I remember being incredibly sad, and then moments of numbness, but a lot of anxiety in those few days following her passing and even coming home, a lot of anxiety, which was not normal for me.

Winter 1:00:23
That has got to be such a traumatic experience also, just in general. So I can imagine the anxiety like I can relate to the anxiety.

Jess Hennessey 1:00:33
It’s a different type of anxiety, right? It’s, for me, I never I mean, like I said, I’ve had nervousness or, you know, moments of it before. Job interviews or wow, you know, looking back at a day, like it was a really bad day.

Winter 1:00:47
Yeah.

Jess Hennessey 1:00:47
Feeling anxious about it. But this was like, wow, I had life inside me. Then it was just suddenly, like, my pregnancy was ripped from me. All of a sudden, I was still feeling like the Phantom kicks, right? So your body is still trying to adjust to not being pregnant now. And it was. Then I think that anxiety morphed pretty quickly into anger. I had a lot of anger, following her death, and just feeling different things at every moment, which was not normal for me. As the planner who is structured, who has all these things in her life, just kind of meticulous, and you know, my whole house is in baskets normally. Then to have all these feelings that are all over the place, and not being able to control them. Because you’re just in such a traumatic state at that point. So that’s how I was feeling post her death. Yeah.

Winter 1:01:37
Yeah. Just, it’s just so it’s devastating. It’s Yeah. Jess tell me I just want to hear a couple last things about Addy. I want you to tell us something that you remember about her that you want to just share with people. Like I kind of want to know a few more things like, How big was she and how long was she? You said she had dark hair when she was born, which was a surprise to you, which is so delightful. I was like, oh, that wasn’t I didn’t expect that. Tell me tell me a little bit. Last things that you want to tell us and remember about your Addy?

Jess Hennessey 1:02:14
Yes, I would love to. So she was born 15 inches long, which at 30 weeks. I mean, we knew she had long legs. So that was, you know, right in line with what we thought so she was 15 inches long. She was born five pounds one ounces, which a lot of that I know was maybe fluid. Her little hands and little pills were perfect. She had dark hair just like me. It was actually very thick. I’m like, wow, this I mean, I can she had a full head of hair. She’s gonna have a full head of hair and no wonder I had all that heartburn. The only thing is that we did not get to see her eyes because they were so swollen when she was born. But my husband and I both have pretty blue eyes. I can just imagine her blue eyes if we had been able to see them.

Winter 1:03:01
Did you guys end up having an autopsy or anything outside?

Jess Hennessey 1:03:05
We did.

Winter 1:03:05
You did? Okay. Anything inclusive in that? I mean, were they able to kind of pinpoint any other things?

Jess Hennessey 1:03:15
That’s a great question. So we did have an autopsy. They found nothing conclusive. Besides that she had hypoplastic left heart syndrome with just an underdeveloped left heart chamber that, you know, resulted in blood flow being improper. The valves are not closing. They also found that her lungs were underdeveloped. The hydrops was likely again, a symptom not a causation necessarily of one or the other. It was not an immune hydrops. So the difference between immune hydrops is that it’s usually related to the mother and the baby’s blood, which is pretty meaning they’re different. And it causes basically kind of—

Winter 1:03:50
— attack on the—

Jess Hennessey 1:03:52
Yeah, exactly on the immune system of the baby. But that is pretty rare now because they test the mother and the baby’s blood very early on. So she had non immune hydrops. So essentially, it could be a variety of different things, mostly related to some type of defect in the heart or major organ. But all of her chromosomes came back completely normal. So genetically, there was nothing. We actually went and had further testing done. OHSU continued to advocate for Patrick and I, and, of course, wanted to continue our journey to having a family. We had maxed out all of our insurance claims for the year. So we said why not? Let’s go get this crazy, you know, $10,000 genetic tests, but I also might as well moving forward. We actually had that done in both of them and came back that we were completely compatible. So there were no genetic potential abnormalities if we were to try to conceive again, and there was nothing that through those tests, either that came back that they could see an ad each genetic testing, and so everything was 100% fine.

Jess Hennessey 1:04:51
With all of the tests. Her autopsy just showed things that we knew essentially led to her being so sick and passing away. They could not find a cause. So they said that this is— they can’t explain why this happened. The only thing that they told me is that it likely happened at conception. So whatever that looks like, and I they’re like, so you did nothing wrong. That is so hard to hear, because I almost wanted to know, this cause this caused this and here we are today, right? That’s not her story. You never know what happened, or why it happened. So yeah.

Winter 1:05:28
Thank you for sharing that. Jess it has been delightful hearing little Addy’s story I just I am so grateful that you were able to give voice to her and, and share her with us. So thank you so much.

Jess Hennessey 1:05:41
Thank you for having me. And thank you again, for everything that you do for this community. Winter, you and Lee, and a time of real sadness and feeling very alone, essentially, in COVID times I found your podcast, and I found a community of incredible parents who we all have a very different story. But it feels very nice to not be alone when you face something this horrid. So thank you for doing this and allowing me to be a part of that and hopefully reaching others the way that you’ve reached me in this time. So thank you.

Winter 1:06:11
You’re welcome! It is our pleasure. It is our pleasure. I mean, as much as it stinks to be a part of this club, right.? We’re in it together.

Jess Hennessey 1:06:11
Yes we are.

Winter 1:06:23
Well thank you again.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: birth story, early neonatal infant death (<7 days), infant death, podcast episode Tagged With: infant loss

Celebrating Her Baby After She Died | How Mom Tiffany Has Mourned

February 7, 2022 by Winter

Mom Tiffany talks about how she has both grieved and celebrated the short life of her sweet daughter Khyana, who was born at 26 weeks and died four days later due to an infection because of a hole in her bowel. She talks about how grief is not linear and the many ways she celebrates her daughter.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):

Time Stamps:

00:00 Welcome
04:42 Celebrating 1st birthday
07:53 How Tiffany’s relationship changed with her then-boyfriend
08:51 What not to say to a loss mom
10:54 Grief is not linear
12:12 What she does to honor her daughter

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen to Tiffany‘s birth episode of daughter Khyana: Click here
  • Watch/listen Bianca and Michael share their experience of delivering their son Jalen: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Go here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts.
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.

Mentioned links

  • How 2 Survive Loss Facebook
  • Amazon link to Book: Celebrating the Life of Your Infant After Death: Ways to Keep the Memory of Your Infant Alive
Baby Khyana in the NICU

Full Transcription:

Winter 0:00
Everybody, welcome. We are so grateful that you are joining us here for another episode of still a part of us. And I am winter and we are so grateful you’re here.

Winter 0:09
I just wanted to do a really quick warning that there are a lot of triggers in this conversation, this interview that we’re going to have today with Tiffany. So please just keep yourself safe and healthy. If this is not a good time for you to listen to this, please do not listen to this episode.

Winter 0:25
If you are a lost mom or lost dad, feel free to subscribe. We want to make this community a place that people can find support and help. So once again, we want to welcome Tiffany. We were able to hear the birth story of her daughter Khyana. If you haven’t checked that out, please jump on over and listen to that episode, or watch that episode as well.

Winter 0:45
So Tiffany, welcome again. Thank you so much for coming on today.

Tiffany 0:48
Thank you for having me.

Winter 0:49
A little bit of context. Can you tell us how long ago Khyana was born and when she passed away?

Tiffany 0:55
She was born– next month it will be three years. She was born on May 23, 2018 and passed away May 27, 2018.

Winter 1:05
So she lived a short four days, but four really impressionable days for you I’m sure.

Tiffany 1:11
Yes.

Tiffany 1:12
It’s been three years. How did grief look like for you in those first early days, those first few months?

Tiffany 1:18
I was grieving– well it first happened I was devastated. Afterwards it’s been a switch. It is on and off certain moments are more painful than others.

Tiffany 1:30
In the beginning I went to– I think the day after actually went to a grocery store with my boyfriend. We went in there, but it was around the holiday period. So there were so many children and babies. I sat in the car and cried. As soon as we got to the car I cried. I ran to the car. I couldn’t do it. Just being in the grocery store with all the kids and families.

Winter 1:53
Isn’t that amazing? You’re like there’s a lot of kids here.

Tiffany 1:56
Yeah. Usually that’s something I don’t care about because I love dealing with kids. I work with kids sometimes. Well, not as much here, but when I was in the states. I worked with kids more. My mom owns a daycare in Georgia. So every time I come back to Georgia even now when I come back to Georgia it doesn’t bother me to go see the kids play with the kids and stuff. Children don’t usually bother me, but around that time period it did.

Winter 2:20
Well, I think it’s so raw and new for you, too, have just had that loss. So yeah, of course it wouldn’t be so hard. How has it looked as you’ve gotten farther away from her birth and death?

Tiffany 2:33
It is still up and down, but it’s better. I guess I got used to as I can handle it more now. The month of May hits me the hardest. Mother’s Day, the day she was born, the day she died, is all in the same month. So the month of May hits me the hardest. Other months are here nor there and it is always in the back of my mind. But for the most part I at least seem okay. I learned to live with my new normal.

Winter 3:03
Yeah, yep. That’s exactly what it is. It’s a new normal, isn’t it? You’re like, Hi, I guess I’m a different person now.

Tiffany 3:10
Yeah.

Winter 3:10
What does healing look like for you? Has there been anything that’s been super helpful for you to kind of process your grief? Is there anything physical that you have that you try to hold on to to remember her?

Tiffany 3:25
I have her molds. They’re supposed to be coming. I had my stuff shipped from Turkey to here. So that was in the shipment, it’s supposed to be here soon hopefully. I really miss them.

Winter 3:38
Yeah.

Tiffany 3:40
I got necklaces as well. I have pictures of those. But I have necklaces that people gave me. Some of them have her name on them. Some of them have angels on them. I adore it. It’s like four of them and I adore all of them.

Winter 3:52
I’m wearing my necklace too. So that’s exactly what you do. things to remember your kids by.

Winter 3:58
I just wanted to point out if you are unfamiliar, Tiffany is currently in Japan right now. So that’s why she’s having her stuff shipped. She just barely moved there about a month ago, right? A month or two ago.

Tiffany 4:09
Yeah.

Winter 4:10
So if you’re wondering what that’s about, because I was like Turkey? You had your stuff shipped from Turkey. I’m sure that was the stop on the route over to Japan. So what is your go to thing that you tried to do to sit and remember Khyana? To kind of mourn her. Was there anything in particular you did early on, or maybe even now that you do to help with that?

Tiffany 4:35
Early on, like right after she passed away. We did have a celebration of life cookout, which took place in Georgia, my hometown. After that every year I usually do something. Her first birthday, I got a little cake with a candle on it, and had some food just for me and my boyfriend at the time. Last year, I actually had a small event with brownies, jello shots, cake, games, stuff like that. I had several people over. This year because I just moved here, I’m not really sure what I want to do yet.

Winter 5:15
Yeah, cause you’re just there by yourself, right?

Tiffany 5:19
Yeah, I’m here by myself.

Winter 5:20
Yeah, so that’ll be tricky. I know birthdays are hard to maneuver sometimes I feel like. It sounds like you’ve done something to kind of honor her birthday every single year. It sounds like you had a lot of fun actually last year, which is great. Got together with my family.

Tiffany 5:34
Yeah.

Winter 5:36
That is great. Holidays can be so tricky, especially Mother’s Day. Mother’s Day, I feel, is brought with anxiety and some sadness, especially if you’ve had a loss. So yeah, that’ll be hard and that’s coming up here in the next little bit. So I really hope that it goes well, or that you take some time to yourself to remember her.

Tiffany 5:55
I will try to because I used to work on a Sunday. So luckily, I’ll be home. I won’t be at work.

Winter 5:59
I know. Yeah. Breaking down at work is super fun, isn’t it? Did you by any chance take advantage of anything like a therapist or a grief counseling group? Anything like that to help you as you transition from your loss?

Tiffany 6:14
I did see a counselor a little bit afterwards. I wasn’t sure how I was supposed to be feeling at the time. Because I was also dealing with the postpartum hormones as well.

Winter 6:26
Oh, yeah.

Tiffany 6:28
At first I was crying because Khyana died. Then I was crying and didn’t know why. I did go see a counselor to make sure that was normal. But I didn’t really know what was normal. What was it?

Winter 6:41
Yeah.

Tiffany 6:42
She was like, you know, this is normal that you’re feeling this way. She helped me. I went to go see one once just to make sure everything was okay. She was like, you know, you’re fine. I didn’t– I never took any, me personally, I never took any medicine. I didn’t want to. They offered it when I went back to my doctor’s appointment. They offered me some pills or something else. Like I don’t want to take pills. I just want to let everything pass.

Winter 7:09
Okay, so you were okay, you were okay. Like, you’re just like, I’m gonna just cry it out. Or I’m going to feel all the feelings or I’m going to– that’s kind of what it sounds like. You ‘re trying to like, I don’t want to take anything to suppress any emotions?

Tiffany 7:24
Or numb me out, or something that you have to take forever. I mean, just me personally, I just didn’t want that.

Winter 7:30
Yeah. And I think it’s obviously different for everybody, especially with postpartum people. Some people obviously struggle with that. They may need some medication, but it sounds like you were like, I’m gonna, I’m just gonna ride this out.

Tiffany 7:44
Yeah, it wasn’t as bad to the point where I tried to hurt myself, or hurting myself or anything like that.

Winter 7:50
Good.

Tiffany 7:50
It never made it to that point.

Winter 7:52
Okay, gotcha. It sounds like your boyfriend at the time. He was there along with you. Was he struggling also with the loss?

Tiffany 8:00
He was struggling, but it was more in a different way than I was.

Winter 8:04
Yeah.

Tiffany 8:04
I guess he needed to constantly see me sad about it. I know he feels sad as well. But he just dealt with it in a different way.

Winter 8:12
We’re all different. So I mean, so he was just dealing with it a little differently. Did that change your relationship at all? When you guys were navigating? After her death?

Tiffany 8:23
It did. It changed a lot. Um, I won’t discuss the details. But there was other things going on that eventually broke up. I eventually left and I moved to Turkey.

Winter 8:34
Yeah. Okay.

Tiffany 8:36
A year later.

Winter 8:36
Gotcha. I think it does change relationships. It’s tricky. It’s super tricky. So tell me, was there something that somebody did for you? And or said to you, that was really super helpful as you’ve navigated this?

Tiffany 8:50
Yes, actually, they did. Someone told me once because a lot of people– sometimes people say dumb things. They don’t know what to say. Instead I’m so sorry this happened to you. They try to find a reason that it happened to you. I don’t really like that at all. You wouldn’t be doing this if she was still alive, or she would have been in a ton of pain and stuff like that. Or you don’t want her to be in pain. I’m like yeah I don’t want her to be a pain. And I didn’t want her dead. I want her to be alive and healthy.

Winter 9:23
Yeah.

Tiffany 9:23
It is one of those things. Yeah, I hate that kind of stuff. Even in terms of my job in Turkey. I got a position in Turkey to work there. People are like well, someone said to me, you wouldn’t be going to Turkey. You know if your daughter was still here. It hurt. It hurt.

Winter 9:44
Yeah.

Tiffany 9:44
But you have to sit back and realize that people say dumb things when they don’t know what to say.

Winter 9:52
Yeah.

Tiffany 9:53
To try to make it make sense when it doesn’t really make sense at all.

Winter 9:55
Yeah, exactly. You’re just like, you don’t need to make an excuse. I mean, you don’t need to have a reason for things. I think people try to reason things out because they don’t know how to come to terms with it. So they like you said they do and say dumb things sometimes. So what would you encourage people to say to you if you had a loss

Tiffany 10:16
To say I’m so sorry that happened to you. What can I do for you, or I mean, a lot of times even a gift card. Or just giving them something to eat, or just come in and check in on them and sitting with them.

Winter 10:28
That’s huge.

Tiffany 10:29
Yes, huge, there is no need to, try to rationalize it.

Winter 10:34
Oh, I like that. There’s no need to rationalize that. Crappy stuff just happens. She was born at 26 weeks that will be tough physically on her regardless. So I guess throughout all of this, have you had any lightbulb moments about life and death or things that you have realized about grief or loss that you’d like to share with our audience?

Tiffany 10:54
I thought grief was more, I guess, linear. Like, you’ll be okay. Like that. It’s not like you reverse back to certain stages. Grief is just like, Okay, I’m sad, and now I’m over it. It is more like, Okay, I’m saying, I’m okay now. I think I’m in a decent area. Okay, now, this isn’t working. This holiday happened, or this month that happened. Now I’m sad again. So it’s not like a linear thing. You’re still gonna have moments where you sit back and you think, or you’re upset that it happened, like, it’s happening over again.

Winter 11:28
That’s the thing that’s so surprising, because you just think that okay, I pass through the anger phase. Okay, I pass through this phase. I’m done. I’m done with those. I should be fine. No, yeah, it’ll come right back to you. So that is a good a-ha moment. I think that is probably what I would say that was the key takeaway from this. So I want to know what you do or have done in order to honor Khyana. What are some things that you have done to remember her to celebrate her to kind of keep bringing her up? Because I know a lot of people still like to talk about their kids, even though they’ve passed on. In fact, this is the reason why we started this podcast and this channel is so that people could talk about their kids. So what are you doing to celebrate her?

Tiffany 12:12
Besides the parties and stuff? I always try to keep her memory alive in my house. I think it is definitely shifting. But I actually had like a magnet in my freezer or refrigerator with her on it.

Winter 12:26
Oh.

Tiffany 12:27
Yeah. I hope it is in my shipment because I really miss it. I can get another one, but I really miss that one. But yeah, that was amazing, I try to keep her memories alive by pictures and stuff. I still have some I need to set up that just got here. But yeah, it’s things like that. I’ve also made a Facebook page, it’s called Rise up, Surviving the loss of your infant. And I’ve also written a book called Celebrating the life of your infant after death. It is basically a way, or ways that you can celebrate your child after they’ve passed away.

Winter 13:06
That is great. So let’s dive into the Facebook group. Is that just a Facebook community that people can go to and kind of interact with each other kind of a community page?

Tiffany 13:18
Yeah. So more of a Facebook page at the moment.

Winter 13:21
Okay, awesome. So I can put a link in the description in the show notes. Then this book, so what inspired you to write that? When did you write that?

Tiffany 13:31
I wrote this and published it in October 2020.

Winter 13:36
Okay.

Tiffany 13:37
Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month.

Winter 13:38
Oh, yeah.

Tiffany 13:40
That’s when I did that. I wrote it because I tried to incorporate ways to celebrate Khyana after she passed away. I know some people sometimes will think it is weird when I throw the celebrations I’ve had because they’ve never heard of that before. I never heard of, oh, you’re celebrating your daughter’s life every year. They never heard of doing that. They think people just sit in a corner and say it on birthdays or whatever, but I celebrate every year. I’m like, Okay. I’m sure other people want to celebrate as well. So I decided to write a book on ways to celebrate your infant, your child’s life after they passed away.

Winter 14:20
That would be really nice to have a stash of ideas to go through because sometimes you’re like, oh, what am I going to do this Christmas, or on their next birthday? So October is pregnancy and infant loss Awareness Month. So that’s kind of cool that you decided to do that. Publish it at that time. So have you been working on it for quite some time?

Tiffany 14:42
Yeah, I’ve been working on it for a while. On and off for a while.

Winter 14:46
Yeah.

Tiffany 14:46
It ended up being the day. I think it was October 1, where I was able to publish it on Amazon. It’s also on Pay help as well.

Winter 14:55
Okay, great. I will put some links in the show notes as well as in the description box below. I think that’s great because we need resources, we need resources, right? This is a place that we both probably didn’t expect to find ourselves in, and having experienced it. We just don’t ever know like I’m always surprised when people are like, I didn’t think I was going to be this young and planning a funeral you know. Those are things that you just don’t think that you’re going to do in your mind’s eye of what your life is going to look like. So, having those resources is great.

Winter 15:29
So thank you so much for sharing that I will like I said, please check out the links in the show notes and in the description box below. So you are going to be navigating this next you’re gonna have Mother’s Day here and her birthday and her death date. You’re not quite sure how that’s going to look, do you have any ideas of how you’re going to celebrate it talking about ideas of how to celebrate or honor your child’s life.

Tiffany 15:53
I’m thinking about just going somewhere in Japan, and having her cake or just having a few people over and just having maybe a small party. There’s also things you can make that I’ve made as well. I might do that again to wear her name on it.

Winter 16:09
Okay.

Tiffany 16:10
There’s ways to celebrate or remember her every year.

Winter 16:13
That’s great. I love birthdays. So I think that’s something to look forward to.

Tiffany 16:17
I do too.

Winter 16:17
Yeah. Even though it has a little bit of a sad memory to it. Do you also celebrate her death date? Does that make sense? Like, I know that they’re two different days. I know some people try and they don’t focus so much on the death day, but more for the birthday.

Tiffany 16:31
That’s basically what I do. I don’t do anything for the death day. I just celebrate her birthday.

Winter 16:38
Yeah. Okay. Well, Tiffany, I have really appreciated the time that you have given us today. It’s been delightful talking to you. Do you have any last piece of advice that you would like to give any other lost moms or lost dads? Or if you have any advice to give to somebody that supporting a lost mom or lost Dad?

Winter 16:55
Yes, I do want to say to the people who lost their child or children, don’t take offense. Try not to take offense. When someone says something to rationalize your child’s death. That’s not something that they mean. Most of the time. It’s just something they tried to say to make you feel better, even if it makes you feel slightly worse. To people who’re supporting someone who’s lost a child. Please just tell them that you’re sorry, don’t try to rationalize anything. Just try to be there to help them.

Winter 17:27
Thank you so much for coming on and talking about Khyana.

Tiffany 17:30
Thank you.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: advice, early neonatal infant death (<7 days), infant death, podcast episode

Birth Story and Death of Premature Baby Girl at 26 Weeks | RIP Baby Khyana

February 7, 2022 by Winter

Mom Tiffany tells the birth story and death of her daughter Khyana, of how she got pregnant with her boyfriend at the time, but she found out that she had an incompetent cervix. She was 1-2 cm dilated around 24 weeks, so they admitted her to the hospital. Tiffany’s water broke a few days later and she developed an infection a week later. She was induced and gave birth to her daughter Khyana, who needed to go to the NICU because her lungs were not developed and needed assistance breathing.

The doctors discovered an infection, likely due to a hole in Khyana’s bowel, and were prepping her for a procedure to fix it, but her heart stopped before the surgery and she died 4 days after she was born.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):

Time Stamps:

00:00 Welcome
02:43 Pregnancy
05:51 Problems with pregnancy
07:13 Admit to hospital
10:47 Giving birth to Khyana
20:03 Khyana in the NICU
23:49 Khyana has an infection
26:45 Her heart stops
31:49 After she Khyana dies

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen to Tiffany‘s advice episode after Khyana‘s death: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Go here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts.
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.
Baby Khyana in the NICU

Full Transcription:

Tiffany  0:01  

Khyana.

Tiffany  0:08  

I loved her hair. She was so small. I wasn’t expecting her hair to look like that. She has beautiful black hair.

Winter  0:19  

Welcome to Still A Part of Us, a place where moms and dads share the story of their child who was stillborn or who died in infancy. I’m Winter.

Lee  0:26  

And I’m Lee, we are grateful you joined us today. Please note that this is a story of loss and has triggers.

Winter  0:32  

Thanks to our loss parents who are willing to be vulnerable and share their children with us. 

Lee  0:36  

If you’re listening to this podcast, just know that on our YouTube channel, there are pictures and videos that are related to the stories that are being shared. 

Winter  0:43  

Subscribe and share it with a friend that might need it and tell them to subscribe. Why? Because people need to know that even though our babies are no longer with us. They’re still a part of us. 

Winter  0:56  

Tiffany, thank you so much for coming on our podcast today. And we are so so grateful that you have joined us and are willing to tell your story about Khyana. Tell us a little bit about yourself and kind of who you are. What you do, where you’re located currently, and maybe where you were located at the time of Khyana’s birth.

Tiffany  1:18  

Well, at the time of her birth, I was in the DC area that was actually working in DC. That was the first job I had out of college. I’d been there for a little over two years at that time. A little over two years, I think. Um, and now I am in Japan.

Winter  1:43  

Okay, so you’re in Japan for your work specifically? 

Tiffany  1:47  

Yes, ma’am. 

Winter  1:48  

Awesome. And are there any things that you like to do per your, like, as hobbies? Or what kind of things do you like to do on a regular basis?

Tiffany  1:57  

I like to travel. That’s been hard with COVID. But I like to travel and see new things. Since I just got here. I can see new things. Because they’re new to me right now. I know later on they probably won’t be new. Right now. I’ll see new things. 

Winter  2:15  

Yeah, I’m sure you are enjoying that. That’s great. That is awesome. So and then just as a little bit of credit, for context. How long ago did Khyana’s birth happen?

Tiffany  2:27  

Next month it will be three years.

Winter  2:29  

So it’s been three years since that. So it’s, there’s a little bit of time that has passed by. Okay, well, then, can you give me an idea of what your family looks like? At the time of the birth?

Tiffany  2:43  

At the time of the birth it was just me and my boyfriend. He’s my ex now. But it was when we were together. 

Winter  2:51  

Gotcha. Okay.

Tiffany  2:52  

I don’t have any other kids.

Winter  2:54  

Okay. Were you always planning on getting pregnant? Was that something that was on your radar?

Tiffany  3:02  

No, it was just something that happened. I actually just had PRK about a month before I had gotten pregnant. You’re actually supposed to wait, if you are going to even try to get pregnant. You’re supposed to wait six months to a year. So it was a surprise. Luckily, I can still see.

Winter  3:22  

That’s good. Just for everybody PRK is a surgery for your eyes so that you can see a little bit better. Is that correct? 

Tiffany  3:29  

Yes. It’s similar to LASIK. 

Winter  3:31  

Yes. Okay. Wonderful. So you were that was a little bit of a surprise for you. Um, so were you concerned about that? Was that something that you were, you know, mad about? Or happy about? Like, were you okay with it? I guess that is the question. 

Tiffany  3:50  

Um, I was actually kind of surprised that I was pregnant at the time. I was shocked because first like I said earlier, I hit PRK. So it’s like, oh, you’re not supposed to get pregnant. I’m like, I wonder if I lose my eyesight. But the second thing was like okay, we’ll be here in the DC area. Is it expensive to live in the DC area, but I was actually kind of happy. 

Winter  4:16  

Okay, that’s great. What about your ex? Your boyfriend at the time? What did he think about it?

Tiffany  4:24  

He was happy when he actually believed I was pregnant. I don’t know what was going on with him. He was like the pregnancy test lies, but I feel horrible. I feel terrible right now. Like, I feel so sick. Like this is my way of telling the lies out. Eventually I got another test to confirm and he was excited about it after that. He thought the pregnancy test was wrong.

Winter  4:48  

You’re like it’s a false positive. Come on. No. Okay, well, that’s great then. How did your pregnancy go? Was it okay? Was it? Were you really sick? It sounded like you were a little sick.

Tiffany  5:05  

I was sick. At the time, I was actually morbidly, I’m not morbidly obese anymore, but I was morbidly obese. Um, I had bad eating issues as well. Like my throwing up. I constantly threw up. Anything in my stomach was going to come right back up. 

Winter  5:23  

Oh.

Tiffany  5:24  

Yeah, that first trimester was pretty rough. They told me what medicine–The doctor told me what medicine to take. And it helped a lot. By the time the second trimester came. I was a little more comfortable.

Winter  5:37  

Great. Okay, well, that’s good. I know. It’s always tricky. How were your checkups? And as you were going along, were there any health issues, anything that was brought up that was of concern?

Tiffany  5:51  

Well, um, first trimester other than I was like throwing up and being morbidly obese, I was fine. The second trimester, they discovered that I had an incompetent cervix. It’s called IC. And with that your cervix is dilating before it’s time. It wasn’t really a fertility issue, it was an issue of staying pregnant.

Winter  6:14  

Yeah. Did they do– did they propose anything to try and help make sure that you didn’t go into premature labor?

Tiffany  6:23  

They tried. What happened was they gave me progesterone pills to use. I had to take those. Well it took about a week because of insurance to even get them. So they had to do some kind of authorization. As soon as I got that I took them religiously. I went back to the doctor to find out that I am like a centimeter or two dilated already.

Winter  6:47  

What week were you with that– would you say that was?

Tiffany  6:50  

That was 24 weeks. 

Winter  6:53  

Oh. 

Tiffany  6:54  

I was about to be I think I was about 25 weeks. I was 24 weeks. I had just taken a picture with a sticker saying “I’m 24 Weeks Pregnant.” 

Winter  7:02  

Okay. Oh, man. Okay, so you were taking the progesterone, any other things that they were trying to help? Kind of, like you said, Keep you pregnant.

Tiffany  7:13  

They admitted me to the hospital when they saw that I was dilated. I stayed in the hospital for I think about two weeks. 

Tiffany  7:21  

Oh.

Tiffany  7:21  

Yes, in the hospital for about two weeks. And that included having her, but before they found out I was dilated, they took me to I guess like labor and delivery and put me on magnesium to help keep her in. 

Tiffany  7:37  

Then I went down to another floor after that. The labor and delivery floor was more serious. So after they put me on a magnesium, I was done. They took me to another floor. I forgot the name of it. But it’s for people who are waiting to have their babies who don’t need to be in labor and delivery. They might have a few complications or people who’ve already had that baby. 

Winter  7:54  

Gotcha. Okay. 

Tiffany  7:54  

They put me in that area and they gave me– tried to give me medicine and stuff. And make me do bed rest. But unfortunately, it didn’t work. When they were thinking about sending me home, because they thought it might be good to go home soon. So like probably the next day or two. Something like that. That same day my water broke. 

Winter  8:16  

Oh, it did?

Tiffany  8:18  

It was the same day that I was trying to get home. I don’t like hospitals. 

Tiffany  8:23  

Yeah.

Tiffany  8:23  

I don’t like hospitals at all. My water broke that day. So I called the nurse in and they took me back upstairs. They gave me more magnesium, and a ton of pills and antibiotics. Then they took me back downstairs again because they were gonna try to keep her in even though my water broke. As long as I didn’t have an infection.

Winter  8:45  

Gotcha. And tell me were you feeling any sort of contractions or anything? Nothing?

Tiffany  8:50  

I never felt contractions during that time. 

Winter  8:53  

Okay, so they were just basically trying to see if she would stay in. As long as there was no sort of infection then they would just kind of proceed as like just keep her in there as long as possible so that she can grow?

Tiffany  9:06  

Yeah, they were gonna try to keep I forgot how many weeks 32, 35 or something like that. They were going to try to wait. As long as I wasn’t sick there wasn’t a question. Nothing was going too bad. They have to keep me in the hospital because my water broke. So I couldn’t leave the hospital after that. 

Winter  9:20  

Right. 

Tiffany  9:21  

Anything can happen.

Winter  9:22  

Yeah. Yeah, exactly. And just to go back a little bit, did you?– It sounds like you guys found out that you were having a girl at maybe the 20 week ultrasound scan?

Tiffany  9:34  

Yeah, I think it was around 18-20 weeks. 

Winter  9:37  

Okay, great. Yeah, yeah, that’s so exciting. 

Tiffany  9:41  

We both wanted a girl.

Winter  9:42  

Really?

Tiffany  9:42  

We thought she was gonna be a boy at first, that’s the thing. Because I went to an ultrasound before that with my regular Dr. They were like well, I think it is because I was like, Can you see if it’s a girl or boy? Because it was around that time. She’s like, I can’t make any promises, but I’ll try. She tried to look and she couldn’t really see much because she didn’t want to move. So she’s like, well, I think it might be a boy but don’t buy clothes yet. She’s like, I’m 80% sure it’s a boy. So I was like, wow, okay, and then we had another ultrasound two weeks after that. We found that it was a girl. So we were very happy because we both wanted a girl. 

Winter  10:19  

That’s so great. That’s kind of fun or different. You’re like, Oh, just kidding. I guess we are having a girl. That’s great. 

Tiffany  10:26  

Yes.

Winter  10:28  

Okay, so then you were in the hospital. You have been on bedrest? Yeah, you’ve been on bed rest for two weeks. Then the day that you decide to go, you’re like, we’re going to get you discharged. They are trying to get you out of your water breaks. Is that 26 weeks at that time, then?

Tiffany  10:47  

Um, so I was on bed rest. I got there around 24 weeks. I was on bed rest for like, a few days. Then my water broke. It was close to a weekend when my water broke.

Winter  10:58  

I see. Okay, yeah. Okay. 

Tiffany  11:01  

After that, then they say, okay, we’re gonna try to keep her in. But about a week after my water broke, I had started feeling very bad, I felt bad. I woke up one morning and was just really tired. I tried to do the normal stuff. There was a set schedule every day. I knew what was going on. I was laying in bed, a bunch of doctors coming in. That was what’s going to happen. I knew the same shows on TV already, because I had been watching TV. 

Tiffany  11:31  

So that day, I felt really bad. Later on that evening, I couldn’t eat. I could barely eat lunch. That was weird. I was always hungry. I could barely eat lunch. Then later, I just started feeling worse. So that was like, what you call it, maybe a resident or something came in and I told him I said, You know, I don’t I really don’t feel well. He asked me if I had a fever? I thought it was their job. But he asked me if I have a fever. And I was like, I don’t think so. He was like, oh, okay, then you’re probably just tired or something like that. But it’s the thing. It was the evening. So the doctors come back to that . 

Tiffany  12:10  

So even though he said that there was gonna be somebody else coming in at least two, three minutes later. They always play me like that in the evening. I said that, I’m just going to talk to the next nurse. I said, I want to talk to the next doctor nurse that comes in here. 

Winter  12:22  

Yeah. 

Tiffany  12:22  

So another two or three minutes later, another nurse came in. And I told her, I said, I don’t feel good. She asked me a few more details to describe what was going on. I did and she was like, hold on. I’m going to go and get something to check your temperature. I’ll be right back. So she came in, she checked my temperature. And she was like, Okay, I gotta look at the doctor. Because I had a fever and the way I was describing how I was feeling, she was like, yeah, I gotta go get the doctor. I’ll be right back okay. 

Tiffany  12:48  

So the doctor came in and the doctor was like, I’m gonna do some more blood work on you. But I think we need to go to labor and delivery. And she’s like, I’m gonna get you prepped and I’m gonna do the blood work really quickly. I’m gonna get you prepped, then we’re gonna go up to labor and delivery. It is time for you to give birth because you have an infection. I think you have an infection.

Winter  13:08  

Okay. What were you thinking at that time? When they’re like, Okay, it’s time. 

Tiffany  13:12  

Yeah, I cried. I cried when she told me that because I was only like, 26 weeks, 26 and a half weeks. So I cried. My ex at the time I called him because he was at home. So he came to visit and stuff of course, but he was working. 

Winter  13:27  

Yeah. 

Tiffany  13:28  

He had gotten off at the time. So he was at home. I thought he was at home. I call him like, Hey, I’m gonna have to give birth, you’re going to have to come up here. And he’s like, Okay. He’s like, he was leaving the grocery store or something. He’s like I’m gonna throw this in the house. Then I’m coming right up there. 

Tiffany  13:44  

So he came. They put me in a room. They put me back on magnesium again. And they let him in. And then they gave me the pitocin to induce contractions, because throughout the whole thing, I never had contractions. I never really was in pain the whole time until they gave me the pitocin to start the contractions. 

Tiffany  14:10  

Yeah. And those can be powerful contractions.

Tiffany  14:15  

Very powerful contractions. It was pretty bad. So because I wanted to give birth without an epidural, but because I was given pitocin I was like, I need the epidural.

Winter  14:25  

Yeah, you’re like, bring it on.

Tiffany  14:28  

Yeah, I’m basically like, bring it on. But it was pretty quick. Because that night is when I was induced. I had her that next morning. 

Winter  14:34  

Oh, wow. Okay. Yeah, very quickly. Um, so obviously, when you were told that you had to have your baby basically because you have an infection. You’re at 27 weeks, have the doc-

Tiffany  14:49  

–26 weeks.

Winter  14:50  

Excuse me. 26 weeks, had the doctors talk to you about what that meant if the baby was going to be born at that time. What did they tell you?

Tiffany  15:01  

Um, they told me about learning disabilities and breathing issues. They told me that when I first got to the hospital and got admitted in general I was like 24 weeks. They tell me that then. Then as I was, before I gave birth, when I was laying in the hospital bed on labor delivery, before I had her. They were telling me about the complications. They told me that girls have a slight, slightly higher chance of surviving the boys. They told me neurological issues, you know, things like that could happen. Breathing issues, and they told me that they were going to try to help her. And you know, stuff doctors usually say.

Winter  15:38  

Yeah. What were you thinking about what they were saying? Were you worried about all those things? Well, I guess the other thing is that you were worried about the possibility that she wouldn’t make it?

Tiffany  15:51  

I was. I told my ex when we first got to the hospital when I was in labor and delivery. I told him at the beginning I said, she’s not gonna make it. I said, she’s gonna die. We’re gonna lose her. I told him that at 24 weeks. I said she’s not gonna make it. He said yes she is. I’m crying and I said no she’s not. She’s not going to make it. She’s not gonna make it. The second time that the doctor was talking to me right before I gave birth. I was actually Okay, at that point. I wasn’t crying or anything. I was fine at that point.

Tiffany  16:29  

When I gave birth to her that morning, she came out and she didn’t cry. I was like why? I couldn’t see it at first, because the way they had me positioned. Why wasn’t she crying? Why didn’t she cry? My ex Corey is explaining that she’s just looking around. Like, she wasn’t crying. But she was so amazing. She was so surprised she couldn’t cry. So I was laughing because she wasn’t crying. She tried to cry a little bit after they tried to get her away. But she was so surprised. She just looked around the whole time.

Winter  17:03  

Really?

Tiffany  17:05  

Really.

Winter  17:05  

She’s just looking around observing the world. She’s like, wait a second.

Tiffany  17:09  

In shock observing the world. That’s why she didn’t cry. So she came out and my ex is like, look I told you she was gonna be okay. Look, she’s looking around. She’s looking around. She’s, she’s gonna be okay. He went over there to look at her while they were doing work on her and stuff. They took her as soon as I had her. They took her and they put her in a room kind of connected to mine. They put her in that tube and put the bags and everything on her. And he was like, you know, I looked over and she’s okay. She’s fine. And I was like, okay, and one other thing. They told me before I gave birth, they say I might not see her for 24 hours. And I was thinking why I said I was like, that’s not gonna happen. But oh, yeah, I made sure that didn’t happen. I went to see you.

Winter  17:51  

Oh, good. So you labored. They started you on pitocin the night before. And then you gave birth to her in the morning? What time is it in the morning? 

Tiffany  17:59  

I think it was like five. I’m not exactly sure about the time. I forgot the actual time. It was like five or something in the morning.

Winter  18:06  

Okay, so several hours of laboring and when you gave birth, what, what was your feeling? Like? And it sounds like you were a little concerned that she wasn’t crying. But um, how did you feel?

Tiffany  18:18  

I was happy after I gave birth to her. So they said, you know, we’re going to take it to the NICU. And after they took her away, I fell asleep immediately.

Winter  18:24  

Oh?

Tiffany  18:24  

Like as soon as they  took her away, I fell asleep. And then after that, I woke up and I was like— because they told me before I fell asleep they said call us when you’re ready to get up and go to the restroom. Okay. So I fell asleep and I woke up and I was called by the nurse. I said, Okay, I’m ready to go to the restroom and I’m ready to see my daughter Khyana.

Winter  18:46  

Okay, yeah. 

Tiffany  18:48  

They helped me and put me in a wheelchair. The first time I went down there.

Winter  18:53  

Okay.

Tiffany  18:54  

To see her because it was a lot. Then they moved me. They made sure I was okay and they moved me back downstairs again since I’ve given birth. After that, I knew what they showed me where the NICU was at. So I just used the rail and walked myself— using the rail I dragged myself down there. Kind of like walking. They were like Wow, you’re doing great. I was like yeah my daughter’s in the NICU. I can’t wait for somebody to bring me a wheelchair. I gotta go see her. 

Winter  19:19  

Yeah, that’s great. Was it on the same floor at least?

Tiffany  19:24  

It was on the same floor.

Winter  19:24  

Okay good because I was like oh man! 

Tiffany  19:25  

It was a long hallway or what felt like a long hallway. It was on the same floor.

Winter  19:31  

Okay. 

Tiffany  19:33  

Yeah, everybody’s like you’re doing amazing after all that. I can’t believe you can get up and go down the hall. Because of everything that happened. I was like, yeah.

Winter  19:42  

Yeah. So she is. So when she came out, was she breathing on her own? Was she doing okay, like how? Was there any physical things that she was kind of struggling with? I guess she is only 26 weeks old. So that’s why I’m wondering.

Tiffany  20:04  

She didn’t have anything like her outside. She didn’t have any physical deformities or anything. They did have to help her with breathing. They actually took her off the breathing thing at one point for a very short period of time, I think maybe about an hour, hour and a half. But she wasn’t ready for it yet, so they’ve kind of put her back on there.

Winter  20:24  

Yeah.

Tiffany  20:25  

It was mostly her inside. Her outside was perfect. She is still very small, but she was a pound and 14 ounces.

Winter  20:32  

Oh, that’s small. 

Tiffany  20:33  

Extremely small, but her outside looked perfect. It was the inside that we’re having the issues with.

Winter  20:39  

Yeah, so her lungs were probably not developed and any other things that they told you about?

Tiffany  20:46  

It was mainly just her lungs and there’s like, you know, certain parts of her, you know, insides might not have developed fully, but it was mainly I think her lungs until she was about four days old.

Winter  20:59  

Gotcha. Okay. So tell me her name is Khyana. How did you guys choose that name? Is there any special meaning behind it?

Tiffany  21:10  

Not really. See we didn’t want her to have a name that everybody else had. My ex and I were watching something on TV and something or someone’s name was Tiana. He was like, he was like, how about Tiana? I said no, not Tiana. He was like, Okay, how about Khyana? I was like okay, I want to do Khyana. So that’s what we decided to call her and my sister actually came up with the spelling. So I wasn’t sure how I was going to spell it. My little sister came up with it.

Winter  21:40  

Nice. Okay, well, that’s, I love it when people are like, this sounds good. This fits her.

Tiffany  21:46  

Yes. That’s basically what happened. 

Winter  21:48  

So she is in the NICU and you are basically hanging out with her going and visiting her as much as possible. So what happens when she’s in the hospital?

Tiffany  22:01  

So the hospital that I gave birth at that’s where she stayed until she was four days old. So I told my boyfriend at the time. I was like, Can you bring a children’s book up here so we can actually read to her while she’s in the NICU. So that’s what we would do. We would both go to the NICU together and we would sit down and read to her.

Winter  22:22  

That is great. She’s all hooked up though. And everything to a breathing machine. 

Tiffany  22:28  

Yeah. It was hard. The first time I saw her I broke down crying because I saw all the tubes and stuff. All these machines and I started crying.

Winter  22:37  

Yeah. Were you able to hold her at all

Tiffany  22:41  

Not until she passed away unfortunately. I was able to hold her hands and stuff. But they wouldn’t let me pick her up and hold her out of the incubator type thing until she passed away.

Winter  22:52  

Yeah. That’s that doesn’t. That’s not great.

Tiffany  22:57  

Yeah. It was horrible.

Winter  23:00  

Yeah. So you guys are taking some time and spending it with her. She’s doing okay. It sounds like for a few days. Obviously, she can’t breathe on her own. But she is still doing okay. Is she putting on some weight.? I’m assuming they were giving her some tube feeds or something like that?

Tiffany  23:17  

Yeah, they were tube feeding her. And I was also pumping.

Winter  23:21  

Oh Okay.

Tiffany  23:22  

She did end up losing an ounce though. Going down to a pound and 13 ounces. And yeah, that was pretty rough. But I mean, it was only so much feeding her and giving her stuff that they could do to keep her weight up.

Winter  23:36  

Yeah. And babies usually do lose a little bit of weight while they’re in the hospital. In that first little bit. So what then happens?

Tiffany  23:45  

Day four we go in and we leave the house. We leave our house, we drive to the hospital. We go in and we see this x-ray machine over her. I was like why do they have that x-ray machine over her? The doctors are just like standing around. I noticed her stomach was distended. I was like what’s going on. The doctor was like, you know, we need to talk to you. I guess we came in at perfect timing before they called us. I was like, No. They said well we need to talk to you. They thought she needed surgery. She had some issue with her bowel and she needed surgery. And we need to transfer her to another hospital. To a children’s hospital with a level four because that’s a level three NICU I was at with her. She needed to be transferred to a level four NICU for surgery.

Winter  24:40  

Oh, wow. Was that hospital far away from the current hospital? 

Tiffany  24:45  

They were actually right beside each other. 

Winter  24:47  

Oh, okay. 

Tiffany  24:47  

So they are pretty much beside each other. 

Winter  24:49  

Okay, so it wouldn’t have been a super crazy trip or anything to get her there.

Tiffany  24:56  

Yeah, it wasn’t a crazy trip. It took a minute though because the ambulance had to get all the equipment on her. Then get her there with all the equipment and stuff. So that’s what took a minute really.

Winter  25:12  

When the doctor said that there was something wrong with her bowels, did they tell you it was a blockage? Did they give you any idea of what was going on specifically and what they would have to do for surgery?

Tiffany  25:26  

Yeah, they thought maybe there was a hole or something in her bowel. They kind of told me it was some procedure that they wanted to get the air out because her stomach was so distended.

Tiffany  25:35  

Okay. 

Tiffany  25:37  

So they want to do something to let the air out of her stomach when they transfer her. They couldn’t do it there, so they want to do it the other hospital.

Winter  25:44  

Okay. So they transferred her and then she went into surgery. Is that right?

Tiffany  25:51  

Yeah, I told her bye at the hospital. That was the last time I saw her alive at that hospital. At the level three NICU the one I gave birth to her in. When they transferred her. I didn’t see her. I saw the cart. The thing that she was in, but I couldn’t see her when they went past me. 

Winter  26:12  

Because you are still admitted in the hospital? 

Tiffany  26:15  

I just got out like I think a day or two before that. I just got out of the hospital. 

Winter  26:19  

Okay, so you really had not you hadn’t been spending tons of time with her. You were there and I’m sure you were in the NICU a bit, but you didn’t really get that the last time you saw her alive was right there in the NICU. So, what kind of risks and I guess what kind of odds and risks did the doctors tell you about even that surgery as she was going into it?

Tiffany  26:44  

They told me that the surgery, it does come with risk, but it will. It will help and it’s better than leaving her the way she was. The thing is she never ended up getting the surgery. They were preparing to give her the surgery. They were prepping like cleaning up like wiping down stuff like that. They were prepping her for surgery. That’s when her heart stopped. 

Winter  27:09  

Oh?

Tiffany  27:10  

So, she never even got the surgery. 

Winter  27:12  

Oh, wow. So her heart stopped when she was in the OR basically. I’m assuming they tried life saving measures as best as they could?

Tiffany  27:24  

They did. They came out and they told us about her. Because I heard a light go off. I saw a light go off. I knew honestly I just didn’t want to believe it. But I knew it was hers.

Winter  27:37  

Really?

Tiffany  27:38  

It was code blue, or something like that. A light had gone off. It was making noise and everybody took off into that room. So we weren’t in the room at the time it was in a waiting room.

Tiffany  27:47  

I knew it at the time before they even told us. I knew. We both– me and my ex we both kind of figured that was hers. 

Winter  27:54  

So you see everybody head off into that room. You kind of have this feeling. Do they come out and tell you shortly afterward? What’s the time timeline of events there?

Tiffany  28:07  

They tried. They came out and told us. 

Tiffany  28:09  

Okay, so after we saw everybody go into the room somebody later came out. It was two people who later came out and they said hey, like we’re trying to resuscitate your daughter. We are trying the best we can and stuff like that. It was another parent. There were more parents in the room. I started crying after that. That’s before we even got to go back there. But I started crying and everyone was like it’s okay, this happened to my son as well or something like that. She said that this happened to my son before to– Yeah, I think it’s her child. Her child as well and she’s like it will be okay because I was crying in the waiting room. 

Tiffany  28:47  

So the next time somebody came back out, they took us back. They didn’t tell us that they wanted to stop at a time. They just said we’re gonna take you back there with her. We walked in and we saw all these people over her like people putting drugs into her IV. Trying to give her CPR. We saw all of that when we walked in. I was just shocked. 

Tiffany  29:11  

The doctor was like,– what was the exact word that she said– There’s only one next step to take or something like that. And I was like, What is it? So we want to stop with resuscitation. We want to stop. And I started crying. The doctor put her hand up. She told him to stop. But after that honestly I do not think there was no bringing her back anyway. But the doctor told her to stop. 

Tiffany  29:42  

After that my ex stormed out of the room. I was just in the room crying because somebody had brought me some water in there or something. So, somebody went and found him and brought him back, but we were devastated. 

Winter  29:59  

Yeah. Yeah, how could you not be? So did you get to spend some time with her?After she passed away? 

Tiffany  30:08  

After she passed away, they let us hold her. They let us hold her and hold as long as we wanted to. Someone, I think a chaplain or pastor asked if we needed anyone at the moment. I was like no. No, we don’t want to talk to a chaplain or pastor or anything right now. 

Tiffany  30:31  

Then, you know, the doctors and nurses, they kept coming in and checking on us. They let us do the molds with her, as well as let us take pictures with her after she passed away. I can’t look at those pictures that they took. It’s been almost three years and I still can’t put that jump drive into my computer and look at them.

Winter  30:50  

Yeah, it’s too hard. Sometimes. It’s so hard.

Tiffany  30:54  

Yeah. There was actually a nurse there that had lost her son. Her son was I think her son was stillborn. So she came in and checked on us a lot. She was really sweet. She actually started crying too because I was asking her what to do? And she started crying too.

Winter  31:13  

Yep, it’s such a terrible thing. It’s so yeah, it’s devastating. And to have to remember all of that. So were we able to do the hand and foot molds?

Tiffany  31:25  

Yes.

Winter  31:26  

Awesome. 

Tiffany  31:29  

One they did with her father actually came out better than mine. Those did come out a little better.

Winter  31:38  

Then you guys got some photos, which is great. And Was that something that the hospital did like that? Were they able to take pictures? Or were you guys just have cell phones and that type of thing and took pictures with her?

Tiffany  31:49  

Actually, right after she passed? I told my ex I wanted a picture. I wanted a picture with them. So I can look at the one that was actually on my phone. I took a picture with her. I’ve never posted it. I never shared it with anybody. Because for me personally, I didn’t see her alive. I don’t want to post pictures of her not being alive.

Winter  32:10  

Yeah.

Tiffany  32:11  

So that was it for me. Like they’re there for my viewing only. They’re not for like the world’s viewing. So I’ve never shared those.

Winter  32:19  

Yeah, those can be so precious. And so personal and private. I think that’s great. That those should be yours. So you’re in the hospital. You guys get to spend some time. What were the next steps? What did they tell you about that? About what needed to happen after she passed away?

Tiffany  32:44  

Oh, they basically told us a social worker will be in contact with you. I remember that part. They gave me a few resources, but those were the main two things. I had a doctor. Well, I think she was a nurse who came out and told me she was like, you know, I didn’t know her long. But she was very feisty. Yeah it hurt a lot.

Winter  33:10  

Yeah. I like that. She was very feisty. 

Tiffany  33:13  

Yeah, actually, I was happy that you know, someone said something good about her.

Winter  33:17  

Yeah, exactly. We want people to talk about our kids in a good light, right?

Tiffany  33:24  

Yes.

Winter  33:26  

So a social worker comes in, you get some resources. Do they tell you what needs to happen? Like do they offer like, okay, you need to figure out what, what needs to happen in regards to her body. 

Tiffany  33:39  

Um, that came later the social worker came later they gave, they said, someone’s got to be in contact with me. So I think there was a social worker there. But that’s not the person that I ended up talking to afterwards. They assigned me to someone else. She was the one who called, she told me about, well, first, I need to think about it after she died. 

Tiffany  33:59  

That’s the weird thing. I didn’t think about what to do with her body. I never thought about that part. Like it never crossed my mind until they called me and asked me if I wanted to cremate her or have a funeral. I told them I will call them back later while I was crying. Because at that point, well, I’m not gonna back up a little bit. So I might Yeah, I might start off a little bit. So we left the hospital.

Tiffany  34:22  

 Okay. 

Tiffany  34:23  

With the baby stuff. Like all the stuff we had her because we were in a program. There was some program in the DC area where if you went to a few classes, they would give you stuff for your baby. So all this stuff, my ex had gotten the stuff while I was in the hospital and put it in the house because he was like, okay, so she’s in the hospital and now she’s probably going to give birth early. We’ll go ahead and give you everything. 

Tiffany  34:46  

So all the stuff was basically in the living room. 

Winter  34:48  

Oh?

Tiffany  34:50  

I went immediately to our bedroom and cried. I couldn’t I couldn’t deal with the stuff in the living room. 

Winter  34:58  

Yeah.

Tiffany  34:59  

I had my ex move everything into the second bedroom that we had at the apartment,so I can come out. My family actually came the next day after everything happened because they’re in Georgia and were in the DC area. So they were afraid. 

Winter  35:18  

Yeah. 

Tiffany  35:19  

So they ended up coming as well.

Winter  35:22  

That’s great. So they were able to be with you and help you with everything.

Tiffany  35:28  

Yeah, they were able to come and help me. Um, it was pretty difficult because I would just wake up and I would cry every day. Pretty much like that’s there. Yeah, the first few days that she died every day, I woke up in the morning, just crying because I knew she wasn’t there anymore.

Tiffany  35:42  

I couldn’t pump because I was full of milk, but I couldn’t pump it because I’m like, I don’t want to use the machine. I just didn’t want to touch it. I guess it hurt. It hurt too much emotionally to touch it. So I was just in pain. I could get a little bit out like in the shower and stuff. But I was hurting a little bit physically too. Someone told me some over the counter stuff that can help. I did stuff like that. That dried it up versus trying to pump anymore. 

Winter  36:13  

Yeah. Okay. 

Tiffany  36:15  

I couldn’t do it anymore. I couldn’t do it. 

Winter  36:18  

Yeah, it’s just another painful reminder. I think it’s another painful reminder that your baby’s not there. It stinks. So your family’s home with you. It sounds like obviously, you are so sad and crying a fair amount. Then is that when the social worker or the hospital calls and asks what you guys want to do with Khyana’s body? 

Tiffany  36:42  

Yes, she called right– Because my ex, he actually went back to work like two days later, I think. Because the next day was a holiday, Memorial Day. The next day was a holiday. The day after that he went back to work. So he wasn’t there, my family was there, but he went straight back to work immediately. 

Tiffany  37:01  

So when they called the social worker, I talked to her a little bit before that. But then she called one day and asked. I knew they were doing an autopsy. So I knew that part. But I didn’t. I just didn’t think about what they would do with the body afterwards like no clue. When they call and ask, I’m like, I don’t know what to do. I’m just crying really hard. My mom, she kind of brought me down. 

Tiffany  37:24  

So my ex came, my boyfriend at the time, he came to the door. We talked about it because at first I kind of wanted to do a funeral. Then I decided not to. I didn’t do that. To me. Me personally. It feels weird to have a body just sitting in the ground in a casket forever. So I didn’t. I didn’t want that for her. So we decided on cremation. We actually were able to actually cremate her for free. 

Winter  37:54  

Okay. 

Tiffany  37:55  

Yeah, it was some program that they had.

Winter  37:58  

I do want to go back, Tiffany about the autopsy. So they wanted to so I’m assuming you consented to having an autopsy on Khyana to figure out what happened. So what was it? Was there anything conclusive about that?

Tiffany  38:13  

Um, yeah, they told me that when it was finally over with, they called me up. They called me up and picked out a day. They told me that it was– a hard day because the doctor that was there for the day a social worker was like, “Hey, we thought she was going to be available. She was supposed to be available, but something happened. Did you want to reschedule it, or do you just want to talk to the person who did the autopsy?” I’m like, well, I’ve been waiting long enough for this at this point. I’m like, I just want to talk to the person who did the autopsy?

Winter  38:47  

Yeah. And how and how long was that? Before you got that information?

Tiffany  38:52  

Um, I can’t quite remember. I think it was about two months. 

Winter  38:56  

Okay. I was gonna say–

Tiffany  38:57  

–It wasn’t an immediate thing. 

Winter  38:59  

Yeah, exactly. I know a lot of people think that the autopsy is done. And then it’s like, oh, it’s like a you know, three days later, but I think that’s one thing that people–

Tiffany  39:07  

I wish. 

Winter  39:07  

Yeah, that’s one thing people I don’t think realize is that autopsies take a lot of time to do because they have to evaluate tissues and write reports and everything like that. So it does take like two months, like two or three months sometimes. So you did talk to that doctor, or yeah, you probably talked to the doctor who performed the autopsy. So what did they say?

Tiffany  39:28  

Um, they told me that because of the hole in her bowel. She was it— the whole in her bowel was pretty much what killed her and the fact that she was only like a pound and 13 ounces as well. I think that’s– I’m not really sure what they said about her heart and lungs and stuff. I think those were kind of weak as well, which was typical. But the main thing that killed her was her size and the infection that she had because she also had an infection in the hole in her bowel. 

Tiffany  39:58  

Yes, okay. So that would be so hard. Did you guys do any sort of memorial service? I know that you cremated her, but did you guys have any sort of yeah memorial service for her? Since it sounds like your family was there and or nearby anyway?

Tiffany  40:19  

Um yeah, we did. We went to Georgia and had it because my ex he’s from Georgia and I am as well. We’re from different parts of Georgia.

Winter  40:27  

Gotcha.

Tiffany  40:28  

We are both from Georgia. So we went to Georgia, and went to my parents house and hadit. His side of his family came as well. We had this big cookout. We had someone say a prayer before we ate it. It was nice. We had drinks. It was fun. It was fun. I enjoyed it wasn’t like a sad thing. That’s why I don’t like funerals personally. 

Winter  40:53  

Yeah.

Tiffany  40:54  

I wanted to do a celebration of life thing and just enjoy the life that– the short life that she did have. I don’t want to sit around and cry at a funeral that is just me personally. 

Winter  41:04  

Yeah, yeah. No, no, I think that’s how you would want to honor her. Right? I mean, you don’t want to be sitting around being sad. So that was probably quite the, that sounded like that was good. Maybe healing to have that time together as a family and to think about her. Now I guess the question is, how are you doing now? Like, how has it been for you?

Tiffany  41:33  

The month of May is always the hardest for me because her birthday ,her death day, and Mother’s Day are all in the same month. 

Winter  41:40  

It is just that’s like–

Tiffany  41:42  

-It destroys me every year until the end. I managed from the beginning of that month to around the 29th or 30th is when I’m okay. 

Winter  41:51  

Yeah.

Tiffany  41:52  

But that whole month I am a disaster. 

Winter  41:55  

Yeah. Just a reminder, right. 

Tiffany  41:58  

A painful reminder.

Winter  42:01  

Just a reminder. Well, can you tell me a little bit more? Anything more that you would like to tell us about Khyana about who she was and like yeah anything that you want to tell us that you’d like to remember about her?

Tiffany  42:17  

Um, I like to remember how sometimes she actually had a tight grip to be so small with her hands she actually had a really tight grip. I was really happy that she actually was –I mean she was four pounds 14 ounces so she was weaker, but she really didn’t look like it. She actually was a little strong. I saw muscles in her calf and stuff. I was like wow, I wasn’t expecting that. I was expecting a frail baby. A very frail deformed baby. I wasn’t expecting that. I know her insides we’re not formed correctly, but on the outside. She’s just an extremely small baby.

Winter  43:04  

Yeah. Yeah. That’s awesome.

Winter  43:11  

Well, Tiffany, thank you so much for sharing the story of your sweet daughter Khyana. We appreciate you sharing it. It’s always hard and I hope this honors her. 

Tiffany  43:24  

Thank you.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: birth story, early neonatal infant death (<7 days), infant death, podcast episode Tagged With: infant loss

After My Son Died, I Learned To Ride The Waves of Grief | Emergency C-Section Birth

February 7, 2022 by Winter

In this interview, mom Lori Ann describes what grief and mourning has looked like for her after her son Owen David was born via emergency C-section one week before the COVID-19 pandemic shut everything down in her area. He was 26 weeks old and passed away a short time after he was born. She tells of how she incorporates him into their lives on daily basis, how she and her husband have learned to support each other, and that grief is like waves and how you learn to ride them.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):

Time Stamps:

00:00 Baby’s name

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen to Lori Ann’s birth episode of son Owen: Click here
  • Watch/listen Matt (Lori Ann’s husband) birth episode of son Owen: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Go here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts.
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.
Owen’s First Birthday, celebrating with Owen Bear

Full Transcription:

Winter 0:00
We are so happy to be here together. I’m so excited to have LoriAnn on this episode to talk a little bit more about her son Owen. He passed away last year in 2020. If you haven’t had a chance to listen to her birth story, please go back and listen to it because it was so powerful and so touching and it will make you cry. Just a heads up, it will make you cry. So, but LoriAnn thank you so much for coming on today and talking to us a little bit about grief and what it looks like for you in the last year. So thank you. Welcome again.

Lori Ann 0:34
Thank you.

Winter 0:36
As a little bit of context, your son Owen. When was he born? And how long ago was it when everything went down?

Lori Ann 0:44
He was born March 10 of 2020. His due date was June 14, but he was born at 26 weeks.

Winter 0:54
26 weeks? Yeah. So obviously, when he was born at 26 weeks, there were a lot of issues because your water had broken at 21 weeks.

Lori Ann 0:55
Yeah.

Winter 0:58
He just didn’t have a lot of time to develop and, and was struggling to–

Winter 1:10
Yeah.

Winter 1:10
–to kind of thrive on his own. Right?

Lori Ann 1:12
Yeah, the doctors actually say that the most important stage of a fetus’ time to grow their lungs is between 21 weeks and 24 weeks. So when my water broke at 21 weeks, and he made it to 26 weeks, he missed that most important part of when the lungs develop.

Winter 1:41
Yeah.

Lori Ann 1:41
So they just didn’t, they just couldn’t develop. Enough. So um, that’s ultimately why he passed away.

Winter 1:49
Yeah, it was just so hard to listen to his story. But I’m really grateful for that. So this last year, it’s been just a little bit over a year, and you just barely celebrated his first birthday. What does that grieving process look like for you? Everybody talks about it being a journey, but I’m sure it looks really differently for you than other people. What? How has that been?

Lori Ann 2:13
I think COVID has made it a little bit more difficult in the sense. The night that Owen passed away, I was in a fog. But I had apparently found a therapist online that night, when he passed away, I guess I reached out to somebody that night, knowing that I knew that I would need help and to talk to somebody. That person had gotten back to me, but it took me a month to get back to her.

Lori Ann 2:48
I finally reached out to her. So even having a therapist, as much as I love my therapist, and she’s been amazing. With COVID it’s not in person. It’s either over the phone, or even over a zoom phone call, which I think that’s been fine. We’ve been doing a lot of work. She’s been extremely helpful.

Lori Ann 2:48
I do wish there was some sort of group because I know before COVID you could have group therapy sessions with people.

Winter 2:51
Yeah.

Lori Ann 2:51
You would all meet and then get together and have that support system. I feel like I didn’t get to have that. But I did find different Facebook groups where women have lost their children. I’ve actually made a couple of friends there that I talk to pretty much on a regular basis now. That has been really helpful with the healing process just because it’s helpful to talk to somebody who has gone through, what you’re going through. It’s a very hard thing to understand. It’s something that I would never want anybody to have to understand this type of grief. But it is definitely a very specific type of grieving.

Winter 4:07
I totally agree with you, because we also have a great therapist, and she helps us. She has helped us work through a lot of things. But you are completely right. My little group of women that I have met that have gone through the exact same thing and we meet kind of regularly it’s huge to be able to say, Oh, you know what, it’s like to have lost something so big in your life.

Lori Ann 3:34
Yeah. So yes, and then to understand all the emotions that come with it. One of the things that I have learned in this year is that you need to feel every emotion if you’re angry, it’s okay to be angry or if you’re sad. It’s okay to be sad. That’s been a little tough for me, in the beginning, because I feel like I’m one of those 10s of people that when something happens, I go through it and I handle it. And then it’s like, okay, move on.

Lori Ann 4:42
Obviously this is not something that you can just, you know, kind of work through and then move on like this has been, it’s pretty much I feel like learning how to live your life with this emptiness, or this pain almost every day. I mean, I feel like my husband has been my biggest supporter. I think our communication has been key through all of this, and learning the different grieving stages, because people grieve differently at different times.

Lori Ann 5:59
My husband and I have always been on different friends, parts of our grieving, but my therapist has helped us understand how everybody grieves differently and what it looks like for me to grieve. Then what it looks like for him to grieve. It’s learning how for each of us to learn to communicate with each other, where we’re at. We do that when we literally check in every night together.

Winter 6:30
What does that look like? Is it a “How are you doing today?” Kind of a thing? Or?

Lori Ann 6:35
Yeah, some days it looks different on different days. Sometimes when I’m feeling really sad, I can’t talk. I shut down a little bit. I think it’s just because I need to process and Matt had to learn okay, that’s how she does it.

Winter 6:56
Yeah.

Lori Ann 6:57
It’s not that I’m trying to shut him out, or not telling him things because I just don’t want to tell him I just need to process things before I can spill it out.

Winter 7:09
Yeah.

Lori Ann 7:10
So it’s like we’ve had to learn that. And that it’s okay. If I can’t tell you, right, the second what’s wrong, it’s okay. Give me a minute. And I’ll get him in it. Then we can come together and we can talk about it.

Winter 7:27
Yeah. How does Matt usually process things that you’ve noticed?

Lori Ann 7:32
He, I feel like has a little bit of a tougher time processing things. He had a rough childhood growing up. He has a lot of PTSD from issues from his past. So it’s very hard, I think, sometimes for him to talk about and to even acknowledge a feeling. He’s working on that. We’re figuring out when I do this, it doesn’t mean I’m angry. It might just mean I’m sad.

Winter 8:09
Yeah, exactly.

Lori Ann 8:11
I think for a while Matt is the type that wants to take care of me, and wants to always make me feel better, or, you know he wants to do something to help me. What we’ve come to realize in this is that there’s not always going to be something you can say or do that’s going to fix how someone is feeling.

Lori Ann 8:36
I can remember one night where I think it really hit us. He was sad that– I actually think it was the day before Owens birthday. He was sad. I was sad. Normally, not that we would argue, but one of us would be rushing around trying to help the other person feel better. But instead, we’re learning to almost be in those moments together. That night, we were both sad. We were both like, this stinks. It’s nothing we can say to each other that is going to fix anything at this moment. We were able to just cry together and be in that moment.

Lori Ann 9:30
I felt such a strong connection with him. Just because we were okay with it. You know what I mean? We weren’t looking to fix the other person. It was like, this stinks. We’re in this together. Nothing we can say can fix this. Let’s just be here with each other in this moment. And then we move forward.

Lori Ann 9:57
I really feel it’s taken us this year to be able to do that. Because I mean, you don’t want your significant other to be in pain, or to feel sad, or you don’t want that. You know, you always have that urge to just fix it for them. For us to know alright, there’s really nothing we can say or do right now. It was just a very strong moment. For us, I feel like where it was okay, we’re crying together, we’re, you know, holding each other, we’re doing what you need to do. It meant a lot, I feel like to both of us that we reached that point where we felt okay with that.

Winter 10:50
I feel like that’s a huge step in a relationship to just realizing that you can be together in your feelings, whatever those feelings may be, especially in this crazy process. So that’s a lot of that’s really like, a lot of maturity right there in the sense of a relationship in a relationship. So that’s–

Lori Ann 11:08
Yeah.

Winter 11:09
–that’s pretty cool that you guys got to that point, or at that point, right.

Lori Ann 11:13
Yeah.

Winter 11:14
Not saying it’ll be like that every time.

Lori Ann 11:16
Right? But of course, of course, yeah.

Winter 11:17
You’re just hoping things get better, you know, but you can’t ever split

Lori Ann 11:22
In that moment.

Winter 11:23
It was good. We were talking a little bit earlier. I do want to kind of explore this a little bit more, what kind of things do you have? Or have done to kind of remember Owen. I know that you mentioned that you got a tattoo in your birth story. Then also, there’s something right behind you that I want you to talk a little bit more about. Can you tell us all the things that you’ve done to help you remember him on a daily basis? Because I think you’re right LoriAnn is that I don’t think people realize that there are some things that you can do to remember your child by. So can you show us all of those?

Lori Ann 12:09
Yeah, definitely. Um, the first thing I did was get a tattoo, which I know a lot of people do. I don’t even know if we can see it.

Winter 12:19
Yeah, you can kind of see it.

Lori Ann 12:21
Yeah I have, the mom and the son it says “Always on my mind forever in my heart.” Then it’s got his hand and footprint.

Winter 12:34
Oh, just right there. Okay.

Lori Ann 12:36
Yeah. Then it has his date and then it says, “Owen, are you here?” So that’s always here because then I have my dog’s footprints. Then I love turtles, so it’s got turtles.

Lori Ann 12:51
So it’s an entire sleeve?

Lori Ann 12:53
The whole sleeve is done there. Then another thing that I always have is my necklace that has his ashes in it. I wear this all day every day besides when I take a shower, but this is always– I always feel comfort knowing that he’s with me in this sense.

Winter 13:17
LoriAnn is that one where you can put some ashes into it and it kind of has a lid and it screws down, or is it one that was kind of encased into it?

Lori Ann 13:27
No, this is one where it’s in a kind of see there’s a tube.

Winter 13:32
Oh, okay. Yeah.

Lori Ann 13:34
That’s where his ashes are.

Winter 13:36
Gotcha. Okay.

Lori Ann 13:37
Then you have to super glue it just so it cinches on and stays on. So I have that.

Lori Ann 13:47
Then I had his hand and his footprint. I mean he was two pounds so he was very tiny. I had the idea of wanting a necklace of his actual size, hand and footprint. So I took his hand in his footprint to a jeweler. They actually were able to cut out–

Winter 14:19
Look at that!

Lori Ann 14:19
This is the actual size and outline of his hands.

Winter 14:26
They are so tiny.

Lori Ann 14:28
I know the same thing with his footprints.

Winter 14:33
Uh huh.

Lori Ann 14:35
This was his exact size. It has all the details of it of his foot. These are something else that I kind of wear every day too. I find it just really special that this is his size. This is his exact size of hand and footprint. I did get a necklace once of them, they printed his hand and his footprint on it. But I was like, I don’t know I want the actual size.

Winter 15:10
I’m gonna say they were really small, right on the other necklace?

Lori Ann 15:14
Yeah, it was just like, you know, the tiny little, and they just put it on a little necklace, which is fine, that’s okay. But I just find this to me it’s special, because it’s his exact everything.

Winter 15:31
Yeah.

Lori Ann 15:31
It’s just another way of me honoring him and of keeping him with me every day.

Lori Ann 15:40
Then I have my Molly bear. Which they made this awesome bear where they put Owen David on.

Winter 15:54
That’s so cute.

Lori Ann 15:55
Which is so cute. It weighs two pounds, which is how much he weighed. We actually, for a while I struggled with the idea, but I thought people would judge us. If I took this bear places with me, or did things with it. For a long time I couldn’t do that. I can’t take that with us.

Winter 16:26
Yeah.

Lori Ann 16:27
Then I’m like screw it.

Winter 17:20
Yeah.

Lori Ann 17:20
This is helping me heal. This is one of my ways that I want to remember and honor and keep my son alive in memory. If my husband and I go on hikes, we put the bear in the backpack. Then if we’re at a special spot, then we’ll take it out and we’ll take some pictures with the bear.

Lori Ann 17:20
On his birthday, we actually went to New York City. We went to a whole bunch of different places. We got pictures of the bear with us.

Winter 17:20
All over the place, right?

Lori Ann 17:20
Yeah, his all different locations and on holidays actually. I thought my family was gonna think I was crazy. I brought– because I had text my parents before a holiday and I said, “I’m bringing the bear. I don’t care if any of you think I’m crazy. It’s helping me keep his memory alive. He’s just always with us.”

Lori Ann 17:20
When I went to my parents house, my mom actually took out this little rocking chair. It was this little one. It was apparently her great grandma’s chair, a doll chair from years and years ago. But she had went and pulled it out and said, “I think this would be perfect for Owen’s bear. We can just you know, put it you know where everybody else is. Then you know, the bear can sit there and then he’s still with us during the holidays.” And I was yeah. Yeah, that’s perfect.

Winter 15:49
That’s awesome.

Lori Ann 18:31
You don’t think I’m crazy?

Winter 18:33
Well, I also think that there’s something to be said that you kind of gave him like, I’m doing this. You kind of gave him a heads up. I’m doing this.

Lori Ann 18:42
Yeah I’m doing this.

Winter 18:43
Yeah. So whether you approve or disapprove and the fact that they embraced it.

Lori Ann 18:48
Yeah.

Winter 18:49
The fact that they embrace it is huge, yeah, and they were able to incorporate that into how you guys were celebrating the holiday. So I think that’s awesome kudos to your mom.

Lori Ann 18:59
Even Matt was like, a little eeehhh about it. Because he’s like we’re gonna bring a bear everywhere with us. Then the one hike, I was like, “Okay, take a picture of me and the bear.” And he was like, “Uh, okay.” But then by the next hike, literally, he has the bear on his back like he’s walking through the woods and people are walking by. He finally understood what it meant to me and that it’s just us honoring him and keeping his memory alive.

Lori Ann 19:45
For his first birthday, we actually did a photo shoot for his birthday and we got this nice cake. We had the pictures with the bear with the cake and we did this whole photoshoot. It actually came out super cute. And I was so happy about it.

Winter 20:05
They are so cute. The pictures are so cute. I will share, I’ll share them. If you get a chance go look at her birth story because they will be in that slideshow.

Lori Ann 20:14
Yeah.

Winter 20:14
So.

Lori Ann 20:15
When I got the pictures back, I felt happy. That’s what I wanted. I feel I’m honoring my son. This is my way of always keeping his memory alive and keeping him a part of our life. That’s so important to me.

Lori Ann 20:39
That’s another reason why I’m so thankful that you are allowing me to share his story.

Winter 20:46
Oh, of course.

Lori Ann 20:48
One of my biggest fears. One of my biggest fears was he’s gonna be forgotten. No one’s gonna remember him or, you know what I mean? That’s a general fear. I don’t, he was here he meant he means something. But even if he’s not here anymore, and he made impacts on people’s lives, I just don’t want that to be forgotten.

Lori Ann 21:18
Thank you so much for letting me share his story. This alone is helping me heal. Just listening to other people’s stories, too, has helped me heal in so many ways. I’m just so thankful that you guys are doing this. It means so much to me. And I’m sure many, many other people.

Winter 21:46
Oh, you’re welcome. This is a space where it’s to honor our son too. So that’s exactly the reason why, you said, we did not want anybody to forget our son, just like you don’t want to forget your own and have anybody forget him, you know. So thanks for saying that. That’s really kind of you.

Lori Ann 22:07
Yeah.

Winter 22:08
Thank you for sharing all of those fun things that you’ve done. I think that’s so great. We all have different ways of doing it. I think I’m getting more ideas. Sometimes it’s really nice to say “Oh, I want to do it that way.” I think that’s pretty neat.

Winter 22:21
So this last year has been obviously really tough. I’m sure that after you had mentioned that after you had come home, you had an emergency C-Section, which obviously is very hard on the body. Then you’re also mourning the loss of Owen. Thankfully you didn’t have to go back to work. Hashtag silver lining of COVID. Right?

Lori Ann 22:43
Yeah.

Winter 22:43
I mean, but how was the first couple of months? Was there anything that you guys did in those first, that really raw, really terrible time? It’s just so so hard those first couple of months. Did anything? Was there anything that you did to help? Or was there anything that really kind of stuck out to you during those first couple of months?

Lori Ann 23:06
I feel like every day, something popped up that was so difficult. I have not birthed another child. So this was my first time. I can remember sitting on the couch and I started lactating. I just did not even no one even mentioned that. I didn’t even I didn’t even think about that.

Winter 23:38
No, no, no, nobody told you? Oh, it’s the worst.

Lori Ann 23:44
Nobody told me that. I was sitting on the couch. That was one of the roughest times and honestly, I don’t know what I would have done without my husband. He was grieving. Oh, and also that at that time, but he still found it in him to take care of me every step of the way. I mean, helped me shower. Because I know a C-Section that’s painful.

Lori Ann 24:20
But I was still in that shock stage like this happened. I think I mentioned before that I suffer from anxiety and depression already. Before any of this, I was frozen and numb and was just so lost. He picked me up when I was so down and I still to this day I don’t know how he did it. You know what I mean.

Winter 24:55
Yeah.

Lori Ann 24:55
He just did so much for me. I’m just so thankful that he did everything. He literally helped me out physically, mentally. I’m thankful that this brought us closer together. Because I have heard not such good stories, you know, when couples don’t make it through a tragedy like this. I could see how that could happen, because it’s not easy, and you need to work at it. You need to communicate, and not say that we’re perfect ever, because that’s not true. But I just have learned from those first couple of months we needed each other.

Lori Ann 25:45
We were there for each other. I know that sounds cliche, or kinda lame or whatever. But honestly, because even with COVID we weren’t seeing people. Well, yeah, I mean we were unsure everybody was so unsure of this thing, and people were afraid to see their family. Not going out, and everybody was in quarantine.

Lori Ann 26:14
I have amazing friends that reached out every single day, or would send flowers, gifts and cards to me. Check in on me every single day. I just learned that you just need to have people that you can lean on during those times. The people that understand when you’re angry. That’s okay.

Winter 26:46
Those are good friends when they know.

Lori Ann 26:48
Yeah and it was tough. Because my best friend of 12 years, when I found out I was pregnant, she got pregnant. She was like let’s raise our babies together. She thankfully was fine. Her baby was born and he is growing. He’s so perfect and adorable and amazing. Despite me losing my son, she is still always there for me.

Lori Ann 27:19
Then in the fact of what do you need from me? I don’t want to upset you. I want to make sure that I’m that. Communication and being able to tell people what you need in the moment is so key. It was what I found helpful between my relationship with my husband, my friends, and my parents. It’s not always easy, trust me, because that’s one of the things I work on with my therapist all the time. How to tell people what I need in the moment.

Lori Ann 27:54
But having those people that truly care and want to know how to help you. It’s just, I don’t know what I would do without any of them. I definitely have a very, very strong support system. That is definitely what I learned in those first couple of months that you need to have those people.

Winter 28:16
Yeah, for sure. I want to point out something that you said that was so so good. Your best friend who had a baby the same time you I mean, right. She’s pregnant the same time you guys would have.

Lori Ann 28:30
She was like a month behind me.

Winter 28:32
Yeah. So the fact that she asked you specifically, what do you need from me? And like, that just says a lot too. Because some people can just kind of be like, I want to help you and do everything. She was kind of waiting for your cue of like, I need you now or I don’t need to see you right now. Because I personally think it would have been difficult. For me anyway, if I was kind of doing that same track with a friend. Then I’m like, I didn’t have a baby. Now you’re pregnant and I don’t want to see you. You know what I’m saying like that, that would have been hard. But the fact that she was she said Where do you need me to be? What do you need me to do?

Lori Ann 29:09
Yeah, or like, what do you need me to not complain about? Or what do you need me to do? She’s just been amazing through it all. She still talks about Owen too though. I mean obviously we had so many plans of what we wanted to do. She also had a boy also, so it was you know we’re gonna raise two boys together. We’ve been best friends for years. There were just so many plans and now those plans were ripped away. Even the simple ones.

Lori Ann 29:48
If I post something I always post like a purple our blue heart next to Owen and the one day she even just like said to me like I just want you to know that I hope, you know, when I post pictures of my son, I post a green heart, because I associate the blue heart with Owen. Owen is the blue heart. I don’t want to take that from Owen, just like things like that, that’s just so thoughtful, and amazing. Definitely need more people like that.

Lori Ann 30:27
I mean sometimes people try to help and they don’t mean any harm by the things they say. But sometimes it can be painful. But again, there’s no right or wrong thing to say. It’s such a heavy topic.

Winter 30:47
Yeah.

Lori Ann 30:48
I feel as long as it’s being talked about, and people are being open, and people don’t have to feel ashamed of hiding anything, or just with this bear. I literally was almost feeling ashamed that I was going like, I have five outfits for this bear. You know what I mean? At first, I was like, I’m crazy. There’s something wrong with me. But then you know what, it’s helping me heal whatever.

Winter 31:19
I was gonna say. That’s the nurturing part of you. Right? I mean, you’re trying to nurture something that you can’t.

Lori Ann 31:25
Yeah.

Winter 31:26
Yeah. So I think that is really, that’s really cool of your best friend. That is really, your support system sounds amazing.

Lori Ann 31:36
Yes.

Winter 31:36
Sounds like you have had people surrounding you, which is awesome, especially in this weird time. We lost two and a half years ago and that was hard. But I can’t imagine not having all that physical support, like having actually having people come to the hospital and visit us and, and meeting meaning our son. I’m glad your parents got to meet Owen.

Lori Ann 31:59
Yes, definitely. Because it was just two days after he was born, they quit having any visitors allowed at all.

Winter 32:09
Yeah.

Lori Ann 32:09
I’m glad that my parents were at least able to be there.

Winter 32:14
Yeah.

Lori Ann 32:14
To meet him.

Winter 32:16
You mentioned that you had a therapist, you have a therapist, and you apparently contacted this therapist at the hospital and didn’t remember it. How has that been working through with the therapist? Is that something that has been helpful for you?

Lori Ann 32:34
I think my therapist has helped me a lot. Sometimes I feel it’s just 45 minutes of me talking. That’s what I might need to vent.

Winter 32:50
Yeah.

Lori Ann 32:51
She also allows us to do a family session. So, Matt’s allowed to join in sometimes into the session. I think that helps too, she’s just helped me in such a way of understanding grief, and understanding that it’s not so clear cut. It literally comes in waves. When people say grief comes in waves. I fully understand that concept now. You know, you’re like Oh, I’m okay. Yeah. And then it’s you see you as a toy, a baby toy. And it could be you’re drowning now and it could come out of nowhere. I’ve walked past that same toy for the past week, and nothing happened. But then who knows grief can hit you at any point at any time.

Lori Ann 33:59
I feel like you’re learning to ride though it was like a ride. And I’ve learned the hard way to do that. I used to just build up in me, all my emotions. Instead of saying, if I was in the store, and I was feeling sad. I would just let it build up. Then maybe later something happened, I was mad. I would just keep it in. I would be tipped over by my stress or whatever. I would explode with anxiety, anger and all these different emotions. This past year I’ve been really working on trying to ride that wave. If I’m in the store and I’m feeling sad about something. I’m not gonna lie, I have cried in the middle of a store and whatever.

Lori Ann 34:58
That’s another thing. I’ve learned whatever, those people can judge me all they want, but there’s no way to survive unless you learn to handle those feelings that you have in the moment.

Winter 35:14
Yeah, I like what you said, riding the wave, right?

Lori Ann 35:18
Yes, they are, you’ll be able to ride it.

Winter 35:20
Yeah, because they ebb and flow. They peak and they trough. Yeah, there’s gonna be times when you are not just sad, but you could actually be happy.

Lori Ann 35:30
Yeah.

Winter 35:31
You can have good memories of your son, or feel really sad. I think it’s just really good emotional intelligence that actually to do that, it’s hard for a lot of people to ride the wave like you said.

Lori Ann 35:43
It’s definitely not easy. Obviously, there are certain situations where you’re not really going to be able to. Like at work, if you’re feeling a certain way, you might not necessarily be able to ride that out at work. I’m extremely grateful because I work with a small group of people. They all know everything that I’ve been through. So if I need a moment, if I’m feeling some sort of way, I just say to them I need a moment. They’re like, I got it, go for a short walk, take it a little break. They allow me to do that. I’m definitely very grateful for that. Because I don’t know if everybody’s job would be, you know what I mean? If everybody’s job could allow that to happen.

Winter 36:41
Right. And also, just the kind of it sounds like they care about you to let you do that, you know?

Lori Ann 36:47
Yeah, definitely. And I’m very grateful for that.

Winter 36:52
That’s awesome.

Lori Ann 36:54
Yeah.

Winter 36:54
Lori Ann, so I know that you mentioned this earlier of like, you know, there’s not really any one right thing or wrong thing to say in this situation. I think I would agree with you on that. Because I think it just depends on the person, right? I mean, it’s really tricky. And also, depending how you feel that day, or even in that minute,.

Lori Ann 37:14
One hundred percent.

Winter 37:16
Is there. I’m wondering, but was there anything that somebody said to you that really impacted you, or was helpful to you?

Lori Ann 37:24
One of the positive things would be like what my friend said to me: what do you need in that moment? That would be something, I think, would be a good thing to say to somebody, especially because I know a lot of people don’t mean harm when they say certain things. But I think acknowledging, I don’t know what to say to you, or I don’t want to offend you. Or I don’t really know how to say this. I think those things would be good to say to somebody, instead of just spitting out when’s the next child coming, or are you going to be trying again? Or it’s just being aware of someone’s situation. If somebody got into a motorcycle accident I don’t think I would bombard them with when are you getting back on your bike? Are you gonna get on it now? What’s taking you so long?

Winter 38:31
That’s a really good way of putting it actually, I’ve heard that before.

Lori Ann 38:35
But yeah, if you would probably or hopefully trying? I don’t know if you really want to talk about it, or if you’re ready to talk about it. But do you think you’re gonna ride a motorcycle again? It’s just being aware of how, you know, you’re gonna bring up a topic that might be a little hard to talk about.

Winter 38:55
Yeah.

Lori Ann 38:57
It gives that person a way to answer and a way of “No, I don’t want to talk about that. right now.

Winter 39:02
Yeah.

Lori Ann 39:03
Or thank you for acknowledging that. It could be difficult, or whatever it might be.

Winter 39:12
And it’s interesting, because you mentioned before that you started to become very open about your fertility issues that you guys have had. And so if they read the situation gosh, maybe they’re not ready, and so I’m not gonna ask about that kind of thing. I know it is that what are you gonna have another one that one is you’re just, Hey, I’m still I’m still working on this one. I need to, I need the time to process right.

Lori Ann 39:38
Yeah, just with being open with fertility, I think I was saying before I started being so open about it, because I was so tired of feeling so down on myself. When being asked, why don’t you have kids yet? Where’s your kids? You should have four by now. Where are they? Why don’t you have any? Those types of things where I would just laugh them off and Haha, yeah, yeah, we’re getting there. Well, but meanwhile, we’re struggling to get pregnant and it’s not easy. And it’s not a joke.

Winter 40:20
Yeah.

Lori Ann 40:20
It’s hard. Those things led me to be open about it. So people can maybe think a little differently. Before they start asking questions to people.

Winter 40:34
Yeah. Lee, my husband, is notorious for making people feel super uncomfortable when they ask him questions about if we’re gonna have kids or whatever. He’s, he just makes him super uncomfortable. I think it is kind of a personal question when you ask that. So, because you don’t know what people are going through.

Lori Ann 40:53
Yeah.

Winter 40:54
You just never know what they’re going through.

Lori Ann 40:55
Yeah. That’s funny that you said that. Somebody made some kind of comment about it, it was a stranger. They’re, Oh, you guys are such a cute married couple, you gotta have kids by now and I’m like our son died. My husband said you can’t just say that. Well, yes I can. Our son died.

Winter 41:27
It’s the truth.

Lori Ann 41:28
He asked and that’s the truth. It’s not my fault that now he has no idea what to say. So, I might be a little bit too straight forward sometimes.

Winter 41:45
It’s fine. Well, it hopefully will make him pause, that guy pauses the next time he wants to ask.

Lori Ann 41:55
Yeah, exactly.

Winter 41:58
That’s kind of a little bit funny. It’s the truth, right? Well, it’s totally the truth. I know that you guys had a photoshoot, you made it. You actually had a special cake made for Owen’s first birthday, which was just a couple of weeks ago. I think that’s awesome. Are there any other kinds of things that you guys have done for the holidays? Because I mean, you guys have basically been through an entire year of holidays? Did you do anything special or anything that you really that you’d to share with anybody that is maybe going through the same thing.

Lori Ann 42:34
For Christmas I actually made it because we hang stockings, and we have two dogs. So we’ve always had our Matt, Lori Ann, Sadie, Ellie stockings. And I was really looking forward to having Christmas, you know, this year with Owen and I was super bummed about it. Then I’m like you know I’m making him a stocking and I did. I made him this cute stocking, but I added angel wings to it. I did that for us to keep his memory alive or to honor him again, still.

Lori Ann 43:18
I’m still trying to find ways to honor him. And to just continue to do that. Then again, any holiday, we do just have the bear, you know, and it sits in the special chair.

Winter 43:35
Yeah.

Lori Ann 43:36
For his birthday, we had the photo shoot, the birthday cake, and we had some family over. It was a good time. I didn’t want it to be sad. I wanted it to be where our family got together. Everybody hung out, we actually sang Happy Birthday to him. So that was nice. Yeah, I mean, we’re still trying to figure out a bunch of different things, but so far, those are the things that have helped us.

Winter 44:08
That’s great. I think those are great little traditions and things that you’re trying to do to incorporate him.

Lori Ann 44:13
Yeah.

Winter 44:14
Lori Ann Thank you so much for coming on the podcast I actually do on this episode. I am wondering if you have any last advice or tips that you would give to a lost parent or even those who are supporting a lost parent?

Lori Ann 44:28
Um, well, if you’re a lost parent, my main advice would be, do what’s best for you. You need to take time for yourself as a lost parent. If you’re not ready to go back to work, don’t rush to go back to work, don’t let anyone try and pressure you. Tell you that it’s been four months and you need to go back. No, you’ll know when you’re ready to go back to work. Or don’t put so many people’s pictures up on the wall of them they’re not here anymore. No, if you want to put those pictures on the wall, put the pictures on the wall.

Lori Ann 45:09
People don’t understand if they haven’t been through it, everybody grieves differently. Everybody has different needs and wants. Just do what you want and what you need to do to help you move forward, not move on. Because I hate that saying.

Winter 45:27
Yeah.

Lori Ann 45:27
We’re not moving on, we are moving forward. If you’re helping somebody that’s grieving a child, be patient, and understanding. Listen, and don’t ask, how are you and expect good. I’m great. Or if you’re gonna ask how are you really mean it. Really wonder how somebody is feeling and just be there for somebody. For whatever they may need at that time. Because one day one thing might be right, and then the next step might be wrong. So communication is key.

Lori Ann 46:16
Yes, we are fickle beings.

Lori Ann 46:18
Oh yes.

Winter 46:21
That was some great advice for both parties. Lori Ann, thank you so much. This has been an honor to talk to you and hopefully honor Owen as well and his memory. I thank you for your advice. It was great talking to you. It’s just been so fun.

Lori Ann 46:36
Yeah. Thank you so much.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: infant death

A Father’s Birth Story and Death of Son via Emergency C-Section at 26 Weeks

February 7, 2022 by Winter

Dad Matt shares the birth story of his son Owen David at 26 weeks and his subsequent death a few hours after he was born. His wife Lori Ann had a cerclage put in earlier, but her water broke at 21 weeks. Lori Ann stayed on bed rest till 24 weeks and was admitted to the hospital so they could do everything medically possible to keep Owen alive.

She developed an infection and Owen was delivered by emergency C-section at 26 weeks. Owen was unable to breath on his own, and Matt and Lori Ann were able to be with him and hold him before he died.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):

Time Stamps:

00:00 Baby’s name

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen Lori Ann’s (Matt’s wife) birth episode of son Owen: Click here
  • Watch/listen to Lori Ann’s advice episode after Owen’s death: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Go here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts.
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.
Matt and LoriAnn with their son Owen

Full Transcription:

Matt’s Story of Son Owen 

Matt Liddle  0:01  

My child’s name is Owen David. 

Matt Liddle  0:10  

I remember the moment he opened his eyes. There’s a lot of tubes and a lot of people but the moment he opened his eyes, they were just so precious. No surprise, he had a full head of hair. I thought he was perfect. He was something else.

Winter  0:30  

Welcome to Still A Part of Us a place where moms and dads share the story of their child who was stillborn or who died in infancy. I’m Winter.

Lee  0:37  

And I’m Lee, we are grateful you joined us today. Please know that this is a story of loss and has triggers

Winter  0:43  

Thanks to our loss parents who are willing to be vulnerable and share their children with us.

Lee  0:47  

If you’re listening to this podcast, just know that on our YouTube channel, there are pictures and videos that are related to the stories that are being shared.

Winter  0:54  

Subscribe and share it with a friend that might need it and tell them to subscribe. Why? Because people need to know that even though our babies are no longer with us, they’re still a part of us.

Lee  1:07  

Now Matt, please tell me about yourself. 

Matt Liddle  1:10  

Okay. So right now every day is a little different for me. I wake up feeling great and other days, and I wake up feeling extremely sad and depressed. On days I’m feeling down, it’s very hard to get out of bed, nevermind accomplishing anything. 

Matt Liddle  1:31  

Currently, I’m unemployed due to COVID. And to be honest, I’m not ready to go back to work yet, even if COVID wasn’t a thing. It’s hard to really truly accept what happened. I think I’m at that point now where I’m kind of dealing with it. I’m really finally allowing it to go through. 

Matt Liddle  1:55  

Before Owen passed I was actually living my dream job. I’ve had a pretty complicated childhood. And it’s because of things outside of my control and I have zero consistency in my life. So what better job to do than to find something to fix problems. You have a star consistency and training program. 

Matt Liddle  2:23  

So I started working in a pot room and a fragrance company is a very big company, but I just needed to get my foot in the door. I’m the kind of guy who thinks it’s not where you are in life, but it’s where you want to be. I just wanted to get my foot in and prove myself faster, multiple promotions, and I ended up working in the office as opposed to working in a union at the plant. I was figuring out ways to cut production time and at the same time saving the company money. So I felt great. 

Matt Liddle  3:01  

Yeah, so I was the first person in my family to graduate high school. So, me going anywhere for a job was huge. The main goal for my life was, oh, you’re going to be on welfare, just like your parents, and stuff like that. But I met Laurie Ann. She really changed my life. I felt like I could do anything and I wanted to give this girl what she deserves because I didn’t really feel like I deserved anything at all. 

Matt Liddle  3:36  

Push came to shove, I started doing very well and got a great job. I was actually in the middle of the interview when I found out that she wasn’t doing well. So I went home that night and her water broke. 

Matt Liddle  3:57  

We were actually sitting in the living room and do you ever see a look on the person you love’s face and you can just tell something’s completely wrong, but they’re kind of stuck in like shock? 

Lee  4:12  

Yeah.

Matt Liddle  4:12  

So I started trying to talk to her and she’s like, my water broke. At that point, we’re only 21 weeks. This is impossible, but for some reason my mind just went. I said go to the bathroom by yourself. In the meantime, I went and I packed the bag and I did all these things. Because we weren’t even to that point where you should have a bag and stuff. 

Lee  4:43  

Yeah. 

Matt Liddle  4:43  

So I kinda wasn’t thinking and the car ride down. I was just trying to make her feel better. I don’t know if it’s a man thing, or a husband thing you kind of just always want to make your wife feel better. Kind of put your emotions to the side. We finally got to the hospital. I felt like it took an eternity. But finally we saw a nurse. She did a swab and it came out the color blue. 

Matt Liddle  5:14  

I remember the color and everything she said,” I’m really sorry to tell you that your water broke.” The only thing I remember, which still haunts me, is just my wife’s face. She just put her hands on her head and said the F bomb. Like, that’s it. That’s all she could say. And she couldn’t move. At that point, I was in complete shock. I had no idea. What do you say? What do you do?  

Lee  5:43  

Yeah, there’s yeah.

Matt Liddle  5:46  

I mean, it was horrible. Then they told us that we actually had to wait until the next day to speak to a doctor. So we’re like–

Lee  5:56  

 Was this later at night? Where was it?

Matt Liddle  5:58  

Yes, it was later at night. It was I believe it was around one o’clock in the morning. Her gynecologist just wasn’t at the hospital. None of her team wasn’t at the hospital or anything. So that night, we’ll go back to talking about things that I don’t remember, because it was so stressful. I don’t remember what we did that night. I don’t know how it made it through that night.

Lee  6:24  

Were you at the hospital? Or did you have to go home?

Matt Liddle  6:26  

Yes. Okay. Yes, we were at the hospital at this point, because they said we want you to stay here until you could speak to your doctor and kind of come up with a plan. 

Matt Liddle  6:39  

So that night passed and the doctor came in and told us we had two choices, you have one you terminate right this second. Two, you go home and let your body naturally do what it does. So there’s no infection at the moment, and you’re not doing contractions, so you need to make a choice. 

Matt Liddle  7:09  

I mean, our world was upside down at that point, because we had done tons of fertility treatments. It took us our third try of IOI just to get pregnant. So we’re like, we’re not going to give up now we’re fighters. We’ve got to do this. Let’s find out the information on how it would go either which way. 

Matt Liddle  7:30  

So they said you can go home, let nature run its course, unfortunately, we couldn’t do anything for you here at the hospital, you’d have to go back home. We wouldn’t take you until 25 weeks. 24- 25 weeks, something like that. They couldn’t give us a real recommendation, because we were at that point where it’s possible that Owen will be okay. But it’s also possible that he won’t be whatsoever and he’s in a gray area at the age that he was in that they can’t say. 

Matt Liddle  8:11  

So it’s after talking that night, we decided there’s no way we fought too hard. We were going to fight for this. So we spoke to the doctors and then we decided to go home. The hospital doesn’t consider pregnancy viable until I believe 24 weeks. So we had to go home. 

Matt Liddle  8:38  

We live about an hour from the hospital and my in-laws live about 30 minutes. So we said we should probably stay at the in-laws, in case something happens. We want to get there as soon as possible. 

Matt Liddle  8:52  

Just to rewind a little bit, our main concern was that Owen wouldn’t be in any pain whatsoever. If we went forward with this, we do not want any pain. Clearly there is a chance he won’t be okay if he did survive. He wouldn’t be screwed completely. 

Matt Liddle  9:16  

So we went to the in-laws, we started staying there and trying to I mean, Lori Ann wasn’t possible at the time because she was to the point where she wouldn’t give you a hug because she feels like she would jinx it. For some reason. Her mom would say, oh, let me pet your belly, rub your belly and she’d say, No, I don’t want you to jinx me just like that. Like. So, clearly she was petrified. 

Lee  9:49  

Yeah.

Matt Liddle  9:49  

During all this I was working at my dream job. I started at the pot room and I worked my way up from an office worker to a trainer so it just kept going. At that point, I had to make a decision, be there for my wife, or work. Right? My wife, completely petrified. Neither of us had any idea what could happen if she went into labor at any moment or an infection. 

Matt Liddle  10:23  

So I decided, let me try to go the family leave route, spend as much time as possible with my wife. We actually ended up making it to the point of the baby being viable in the hospital’s eyes. So we ended up going back to the hospital. That was around. My wife’s gonna kill me if I say this wrong. So if I think we got back to the hospital at 23 weeks, they let us come back. Yes, twenty three weeks, and then we’re able to start the whole process of maybe saving Owen. We started antibiotics, so she wouldn’t get an infection and things like that. 

Matt Liddle  11:10  

At that point. My job was extremely busy, and they’re giving me ultimatums. Well, for myself, I had to be there. There was nothing, I don’t care if I lost everything outside those hospital walls. Nothing else mattered to me more in the world than my wife and my child.

Lee  11:32  

Yeah, yeah. 

Matt Liddle  11:33  

So, I ended up parting ways with my job. I wouldn’t take that back, I would have made that choice a million times. Because my wife’s my superhero. I don’t know how it is for you, but my wife is one of the strongest people I know. Anyone in fertility treatments, anyone who deals with this kind of stuff. They’re very strong people.

Matt Liddle  11:59  

I was literally watching her demolish into nothing. Because of the constant fear of being on bed rest, not being able to do anything. Like, I couldn’t do it. Like I had to be there. I had to sleep there. I wouldn’t even go home. I would sleep there. 

Matt Liddle  12:21  

The doctors would come in twice a day to do ultrasounds. It was the scariest point of my life. Anytime the ultrasound would happen, my heart would stop. He even thought my wife was completely fine, I was fine. No worries. But every single time my heart would just drop, like no feeling. I can’t even describe the feeling. I feel like the fear is worse than any fear in the entire world. It’s unbelievable. 

Matt Liddle  12:57  

So push came to shove after all this, I lost my job. I had nothing. I had nothing outside of work besides my wife and my child. We had to figure out a way to get through it. Everyday stuff.

Matt Liddle  13:16  

It was horrible because we were on bedrest for three weeks at the hospital before they were able to do anything at all or until Owen came. After this whole situation. I can’t get out of bed. Nevermind work or live daily. I don’t know if that answered that question fully.

Lee  13:46  

I just feel for you. That’s all I can say is I feel for you. 

Matt Liddle  13:51  

Yeah. 

Lee  13:53  

So you were able to make it to the hospital. After you were about 34 weeks. Did you say? 

Matt Liddle  14:01  

No. Only 24 weeks. 

Lee  14:03  

Oh, yeah. 24 sorry, 24 weeks.

Matt Liddle  14:10  

Then what happened was 24 weeks. 24 weeks was when we were allowed to go back to the hospital. That’s when they were able to put her on antibiotics and monitor her twice a day. 

Lee  14:25  

How long were you in the hospital with that?

Matt Liddle  14:27  

So we ended up going till she was 26 weeks pregnant. So we were there for four weeks. I slept on a cot next to the bed every day. I wouldn’t leave like I couldn’t leave–

Lee  14:47  

Yeah, your life is in that room.

Matt Liddle  14:53  

Exactly. Yeah, it actually got to the point where the nurses would leave and I literally taught myself how to read all of the equipment. I mean the heart rate. I knew where it should have been. I studied that thing. It was and it’s unbelievable how clueless you are, when you’re in these situations. I feel like it would help a lot. If you knew. I mean, you if you knew any of this stuff. If your baby’s heart rate is too high. If there’s an infection or, when you hear the nurses say these things, in medical terms, you can get confused. 

Matt Liddle  15:39  

They’re so quick in and out. You sit there clueless, and your mind just keeps going. So I had to learn how to read the computer. I just wait till they leave and read. That’s the only thing that maybe kind of helped me feel better. To see a normal heart rate.

Matt Liddle  15:59  

So I literally slept on a chair next to her for 26 weeks. 26 weeks came and she woke up in the morning, and she wasn’t feeling well whatsoever. I knew something was completely wrong. So we called the doctor in and within a half hour, they said that we’re going to have to go in for an emergency surgery. For a C section, the baby has to come out right now. 

Matt Liddle  16:34  

I was supposed to be in the room for the C section, but maybe an hour before they gave her medicine for blood clots in her legs. So she was going to bleed a lot. So they decided that, oh, let’s put her out. So they made me suit up. I’m sitting in the room waiting. Then the doctors come back out. They say I need you to come into the room where Lori Ann was ready, she had the gown on and the hat. She was already on the metal table. I spoke to her for two seconds. I said I love you and went into the hallway and waited for the C section. 

Matt Liddle  17:15  

When I was out there. I was just not a sensitive guy in the past. I’m not a very sociable person. But I just broke down in the middle of the hallway. Nurses came and hugged me and they’re asking me questions. I was just so scared because it’s still so early. 26 weeks is really, really early. It felt like an eternity. But I just sat in the hallway and I cried and I cried. 

Matt Liddle  17:53  

Then they came and got me. They said your son’s been born and he’s doing fine. He’s doing great. He wants to come back and see him. So I saw him. Going back to one of the first things I noticed about him was his eyes because he opened his eyes and he looked right at me. It was really nice. There’s about four or five NICU doctors there. There’s so much going on. The machines are going. Then you kind of step back and you’re kind of speechless.

Matt Liddle  18:28  

You still have no idea if your babies are okay. 

Lee  18:34  

Yeah. 

Matt Liddle  18:34  

We got the escort up the elevator and into the NICU. He seemed fine. Everything was looking good. So I decided it’s time to go downstairs and talk to my in-laws because I had called them to tell them to come. To tell them what was happening. I said everything seems to be fine, but I want to go see my wife. 

Matt Liddle  19:01  

Then the doctor comes downstairs and gets me and he says, “I need you to come upstairs to see Owen and I just need to talk to you about some things.” When I got up there, there was a heart doctor there and their stuff was all over him. His feet are everywhere. 

Matt Liddle  19:23  

I was so scared. This is one of the biggest things I regret. I was so scared because everything was going on. There’s so many machines and noises that I was just too afraid to touch him. I put my hand in there once and he grabbed my finger. But then after that, I was just terrified to touch him. That’s one of the main things where I feel so guilty because I could have spent more time with him than I did. Because I went to my in-laws and my wife.

Matt Liddle  20:02  

I was just too scared. The heart doctor was there and all these machines were going off. People don’t explain to you that stuff because they’re way too busy trying to save your child. What was happening was that his blood pressure kept dropping, and they couldn’t tell why. 

Matt Liddle  20:23  

So they told me that they were going to try some meds and I should go down and spend some time with my wife. If anything’s really bad, I’m going to have to come and get you in, we’re going to have to go talk to your wife and have your wife come up and see the baby. See, she had the C section. So we knew something was wrong, if they were gonna come and get her to look at the baby.

Matt Liddle  20:45  

About two hours go by, and we get a knock on the door. It was the doctor, and he pulled me outside and said I’d like to speak to you about what’s going on. He said, listen, the blood pressure medications not working. it’s really not looking good. You might want to think about getting your wife upstairs. 

Matt Liddle  21:07  

So we went back to the room together. And when my wife saw the doctor, he said “I really want you to come upstairs to see your child.” I’ll never forget that look on her face. She just looked terrified, like completely terrified. 

Matt Liddle  21:31  

We went upstairs. They told us that there was really nothing they could do for the baby. The baby’s heart was checked so the only thing we can do at this point is take them off the ventilator and hold them until he goes. So my wife grabbed him. I’ve really regretted not holding him more and stuff. But I was just so scared.

Lee  22:06  

You probably felt lost too, scared and lost. 

Matt Liddle  22:10  

Very lost. Yeah, it was. It’s an experience that you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemies. My wife and I have been through a lot together with a lot of things. She has always been my superhero. Just to see her so broken. On top of watching my child pass away. 

Matt Liddle  22:41  

I mean, I don’t know how people are always worried about the women, but I don’t know how the men survive it to see the person. I mean, at least in my relationship, the person that means more than anything to me just collapses. It was very hard to take that in.

Lee  23:04  

Yeah. 

Matt Liddle  23:04  

I mean, it was really bad. It’s like, I’m speechless about this whole situation. Like I just shut down. I really don’t know. Because it’s like one of the hardest things that anyone can go through in their entire life. 

Matt Liddle  23:21  

I know on the paper it says what’s your hobbies and stuff? I used to love going fishing, playing with my dogs. I used to love life and now my hobbies. I mean, my hobby is nothing. I mean, not doing anything whatsoever. 

Lee  23:44  

You lose yourself. 

Matt Liddle  23:45  

Exactly. Yeah, yeah. You really do. You really find it. There’s like no words. 

Lee  23:56  

Yeah.

Matt Liddle  23:57  

I’m really not now, did your wife have a C section?

Lee  24:02  

No, no she had a vaginal birth with our son, Brannan. He was ready to go. When he passed away he was– with our first daughter with our firstborn we had a C section. But with our son Branna, he was born vaginally.

Matt Liddle  24:21  

No doubt that as a husband part there. I don’t know. So for me, when she comes home, she can wash herself in the shower and stuff. I handled all of that. The lactation and stuff. I mean, that destroyed me watching her go through that.

Lee  24:45  

It is such a cruel– the body after it’s such a cruel trick that that the body plays on the woman because–

Matt Liddle  24:53  

–Horrible

Lee  24:54  

Yeah. It really was painful to watch my wife and I’m sure it was painful for you to watch your wife have to go through all that. And nobody tells you, nobody tells you about it. Nobody tells you that the body still thinks that there is a child, even though the brain knows that your son has passed away. 

Matt Liddle  25:16  

Yeah, it’s cruel. I can’t believe it. I’m helping her shower, and she’s lactating. Up to a week, two weeks later. I mean, it went like eight, nine weeks. It’s cruell. It is horrible. It’s just a reminder that your son’s not there. You’re alone. You went through all of this to be alone right now. 

Matt Liddle  25:44  

I mean, I know he’s there he’s in–. I’m not a very spiritual guy at all, but I’m trying to learn to say that he’s here with us, or he’s in the sky or in heaven. Just because it’s cruel. Like, it’s, I don’t know, how do you? How do you put that into words? Like, how do you watch your wife go through that alone? I mean, not alone, but how do you? We’re men. We hurt. It really hurt her. It affected us. 

Matt Liddle  26:20  

I mean, for me, at least it killed me. But I’m not the one to carry that baby. I’m not the one who had to deal with lactation. And all the complications that come from the C .

Lee  26:34  

Post recovery and post op recovery.

Matt Liddle  26:37  

It’s terrible. Like, did that kill you as well? was that like?

Lee  26:43  

Yeah, yeah, it really, it really was one of those. I felt absolutely helpless and worthless as a man, as a husband, and as a friend to my wife, because there was nothing. I can make her as comfortable as possible. I can bring her anything, but there was nothing that I could do to alleviate her pain. And her and yeah, it really was just, it shattered me as a man. It killed me. It killed me as a man.

Matt Liddle  27:19  

And do you ever feel like you’ll pull yourself back up from that if I don’t know if I do?

Lee  27:26  

No. It’s both a no and a yes answer. Am I able to recover? No. Am I able to learn and change? Yes. Because what happened after the birth of our son? What happened after the death of our son that destroyed everything up to that point. And after that point, I had to rebuild. And I lost my son. My family is different. My relationship with my wife is different from what it was. My relationship with friends is different than what it was, was I able to recover? No, was I able to build new? Yes, I didn’t want to be the same person I was before. 

Lee  28:21  

I wanted to be a different person. And I’m able to start laying the foundation for the type of person I want to be and the type of person I need to be for my family. And like you said, the most important thing was my wife, and my daughter. For you, it was your wife, your wife was the most important person for you. And I had to change for the future. I couldn’t just be the same person with a different experience. I had to be a whole different person. I had to change, I had to be destroyed, I had to hit bottom and then forget who I was before, and go forward as an end build new. 

Lee  29:11  

Was able to recover? Yes and no. And I hope you are able to find what helps you. Because you’re a different person now than you were a year ago. 

Matt Liddle  29:26  

Oh, yeah. For sure. 

Lee  29:28  

You can’t be the same guy you were ten years ago, five years ago, three years ago. 

Matt Liddle  29:36  

There’s one who asked me what’s wrong. And I say have you ever felt a pain that you can never imagine in your life that you would actually survive? No, not really. But then don’t ask me that question. Because you wouldn’t really understand my answer.

Lee  29:55  

Because I’m feeling it every single moment of my life. 

Matt Liddle  29:58  

Yeah.

Lee  29:59  

Like you are feeling that pain that you never could have imagined every single moment of your life.

Matt Liddle  30:08  

Now we’re starting fertility treatments again very soon. Because it took us a very long time to even get pregnant. We got Owen when we had two failed IUI’s, and the third one actually worked.

Matt Liddle  30:29  

So, now we’re starting this whole thing all over again. But it’s gonna be in vitro. It’s kinda like, for me and I’m sure it’s like this for a lot of people, you feel like you would never ever survive something like this again, right? 

Matt Liddle  30:49  

But there’s where I’m wrong,  because I don’t know if I’ll have to survive this again. I’m assuming that I am. Because it happened in the past. I can’t I can’t think like that whatsoever. But it’s very hard not to. Because of everything, and to be honest, the scariest time of my life. 

Lee  31:14  

Yeah. 

Matt Liddle  31:15  

I mean, I lost my brother, my father, and my son, all within a year span. A year well over two years span. I don’t think I know how to explain it. It’s just like, it’s just being there bringings back everything, really rehashing everything. Even if you had someone to talk to, you’re not really talking to somebody unless they’ve exactly lived through it because they truly don’t understand whatsoever.

Lee  31:59  

Even though our situations are similar. They are light years apart. I can never fully understand what you’ve gone through. Nobody can truly understand us. 

Matt Liddle  32:10  

No. 

Lee  32:10  

Nobody. 

Matt Liddle  32:11  

Unless I mean, unless you can understand them. Because you can understand that pain. You, yeah. 

Lee  32:20  

It’s one of the– there’s the word empathy and sympathy, and I’m not good with which one means which. One means I can imagine what you’re going through. And one means I know what you’ve gone through. And because I’ve gone through what I’ve gone through, I think I can better understand what you’re going through. It’s not that I’ve had this same situation as you. We’ve had similar situations. I cannot try to help you. And you because you’ve gone through your situation. You can understand my situation a little bit better. 

Matt Liddle  33:04  

Yeah.

Lee  33:05  

Is it a perfect understanding? No. But they’re a lot similar. 

Matt Liddle  33:12  

There’s respect there. 

Lee  33:13  

Yeah. Respect. Yeah. Respect would be a good way. But yeah, it 

Matt Liddle  33:20  

I’m not good at talking. 

Lee  33:25  

Yeah. And it’s such a loaded reminiscence. When you talk about your son Owen. When you talk about his situation like his life and his birth and his death. I’m sure you want to shy away from stuff I’m sure you want to not talk about because I’m in that same situation, especially a year out from the birth of my son, Brannan. And his death. I didn’t want to talk about it. I sort of had to force myself to, it’s no fun no matter what. 

Matt Liddle  34:01  

No, not at all. 

Lee  34:04  

Going back to when the doctor came and got you and your wife. And he said that. Owen– and it’s not looking good for Owen. And they took him off of life support. And you got to be with him. How long did he live after being taken off of life support?

Matt Liddle  34:25  

Actually I mean, he wasn’t breathing on his own whatsoever. So they gave him phenytoin. So basically, we wouldn’t see him struggling for breath and all that. But now this is hard for me to tell you i

Lee  34:45  

If you don’t want to talk about it, don’t. 

Matt Liddle  34:47  

No, no, no, no, no, I do. So, now again, everybody’s different. Now he’s not living anymore. And the woman and my wife are talking about, Well, why don’t you bathe him and change him. I remember at that moment, like, he’s gone. 

Lee  35:18  

Yeah.

Matt Liddle  35:21  

The worst part that kills me is I look at my wife, and she’s gonna be the most amazing mother in the world. She’s so caring and loving. I remember the first words, the moment she saw him, she looked at me and said, he is perfect. Yes, he was perfect. But she was able to hold him, change him, bathe him and do all these things. I’m looking at her like, wow, I would never, in my wildest dreams, be able to do that. 

Matt Liddle  36:11  

I’m just watching you do it. I mean, we don’t give women enough strength. I mean, and same thing with men, like, none of my friends really know how I feel. They don’t really care. They have their own problems, they may care, but they don’t really know how much it does affect you or your wife. 

Matt Liddle  36:41  

I’ve heard things where people said, well, other women? Well, I’ve had a C section, I’ll see what the big deal is. I don’t know why it’s so hard for them. Yeah, but you have a reason to make it through all of that you had your C section, you have your baby there. You’re not waiting for your breast to get rock hard. So your milk will go away, you have no one to give the milk to. It’s unbelievable.

Lee  37:12  

Yeah.

Matt Liddle  37:12  

If you’re not a part of this club, which I really don’t want anyone in this club ever, you would never truly understand the pain that people really endure and what people have to go through just to have a child. Then you see all these people pushing out all these kids and having all these kids and it’s just like, It’s unbelievable. How is that fair? That’s another big thing I always go back to. It’s not fair.

Lee  37:46  

Yeah, it’s not fair. It is, and people will always say, well, life isn’t fair. But it just seems like such an injustice to me. But yeah, and there’s nothing I can do to change that injustice. 

Matt Liddle  38:02  

No.

Lee  38:02  

 It is, it is what it is. But it just doesn’t. It doesn’t seem fair.

Matt Liddle  38:08  

One thing that I do really need help with is, how did you swallow your fear and everything and try again? Was your mind in a place where you weren’t scared at all that nothing would happen bad, or like I don’t? It’s hard to get going again. To try to have a kid.

Lee  38:35  

Yeah. Now, because we were about two years out before we started trying again. 

Matt Liddle  38:45  

Okay.

Lee  38:46  

I was scared. I was anxious. I was everything. I was apprehensive. I was scared. I was fearful. But we had a real, honest discussion, my wife and I, about what we want our family to be? Because we have an older daughter. We have our son Brannan. Are we okay, as a family like that? And yes, we were okay. As a family like that. 

Lee  39:24  

Then we discussed well, do we feel that we should? Because we are religious. Do we feel that we should add another member to our family? We’re not talking about whether we should add 15 more members to our family. But should we add one more? And there really was some serious internal dialogue. 

Lee  39:52  

There was serious communication between my wife and I. There were a lot of sleepless nights. Just pondering and praying and hoping that there some sort of enlightenment or some sort of prayer was answered. I felt that as a family we should have another. No, it wasn’t like, Oh, we should not have a child. I think we should try.

Lee  40:19  

We gave ourselves– because we had infertility issues as well. We said well let us try and we gave ourselves X amount of months, let’s try this amount of months.We were seeing as fertility specialists and so it was like if it doesn’t happen within this time, we’re okay. We’re okay if we don’t have a child. But if it happens, we’re okay if we do have a child, and there’s all sorts of fear. 

Lee  40:57  

You know Matt you’re going to feel it, you’re going to feel all sorts of fear and happiness, you’re going to feel hope. You’re going to fear you’re going to feel like I said, you’re going to feel everything. You’re going to feel good, you’re going to feel bad, you’re going to feel happy, you’re going to feel sad, joy and hate and rage and anger. But you’re going to also feel that good side as well. You’re going to see a child growing, you will feel everything good and bad.

Matt Liddle  41:33  

Now that old pregnancy where you completely freaked out, it was gonna happen again. Or was there ever a point where you kind of calmed down and were like okay, I think we’re okay. 

Lee  41:46  

Nope, I was a mess the whole pregnancy. So, yeah, it really was just a belief that my wife, my wife’s body can do what it needs to do. My wife tried her best to be healthy. We tried our best to eat healthy and exercise. We’re not Olympic athletes by any means. We’re not even amateur athletes by any means. 

Matt Liddle  42:17  

But you’re trying. 

Lee  42:19  

Yeah well. Sometimes some days, some days we’re trying. But we were like we will do the best we can to give my wife’s body the best nutrition. I made sure she went to bed. I made sure that she–

Lee  42:41  

You know what I have a problem with when she says it’s because of my body. This happened. I get angry. 

Lee  42:50  

Yeah. It’s nothing that can really be blamed. It’s not her fault. It’s not your fault. It’s not. It just happened. It sucks. It sucks. It’s unfair. It’s just the worst. But it’s hard to stop thinking like that. Because we naturally want to say we naturally want to have something that we can point to as being the problem. When there’s not a problem, it’s easy to internalize it and say it was my fault. 

Matt Liddle  43:28  

Yeah. 

Lee  43:29  

But in all reality, it was nobody’s fault. It just, it just happened. It just happened. And it sucks. It’s the worst thing to ever happen. But it just happens. That’s all we could really say it sucks. It’s just the worst.

Matt Liddle  43:51  

You kind of feel robbed he was in our arms, he was there.We were right there. 

Lee  44:00  

You were approaching the finish line.

Matt Liddle  44:04  

So, you don’t know what to be. Or you are all of the things your emotions are angry, sad, like, unreal. Yeah.

Lee  44:18  

I love how you put it. You don’t know what to be, but you feel all the emotions. Like you don’t know if you should be angry or mad or sad. I felt guilty for a long time laughing and enjoying myself. Because I shouldn’t feel that my child is dead. I shouldn’t be. I shouldn’t be laughing. I shouldn’t enjoy anything but you do feel all the emotions and there’s a time and place there’s a time to feel joy. There is a time to feel happiness. And there is a time also to feel anger and there’s a time to also feel sadness. So–

Matt Liddle  44:59  

–It’s kind of you’re a prisoner of your own mind. Because you can go out saying what, I’m gonna be a good, it’s gonna be a good day. But then you go down to the store and you walk past the baby section and you’re not having a good day anymore. 

Lee  45:15  

It turns it upside down. 

Matt Liddle  45:18  

Then there’s nothing you can do. I mean, you can’t avoid it. How do you deal with it? What is he dealing with? You can’t really deal with it. I don’t know. It’s just like, I feel like that will never go away. Never always feel like a prisoner of my own mind. Because I could be in the happiest mood. I could be thinking this, but if I see something, it’s over. 

Lee  45:46  

Yeah.

Matt Liddle  45:47  

It goes right to it. Are you able to, like get back and function to like your normal life duties right away?

Lee  45:55  

No, no, not not right away. It does take time. There’s that adage that time heals all wounds. But it leaves scars. Time does heal wounds, but they leave scars. 

Matt Liddle  46:08  

That’s very true. And they’ll always be there. 

Lee  46:10  

Yeah, like I’ve, I’ve broken many bones in my body. And I still have issues with those broken bones. Did they heal fully? Did they? No, some of them didn’t heal fully, but I’m functioning. Am I whole? No, I am not whole, I am not whole after this, this tragedy. But I am able to continue on. 

Lee  46:38  

It took a long time for me to be able to continue on. Because there were times that I just wanted to stay there and just stay in that pain and in that sadness, and in that grief. But there is just like a bone mending after being broken. After a time it will be able to support what you need to do with it. 

Lee  47:03  

So it was with me and my emotions and me with my ability to exist. I was able to finally say I can. I can exist. It takes time. That’s all I can say. And it hurts. It hurts. It’s lonesome–

Matt Liddle  47:25  

The man never gets the support. 

Lee  47:28  

No.

Matt Liddle  47:29  

Like a woman does.

Lee  47:30  

No. Yep. Yep. Everybody will ask you how it is? How’s your wife doing? Yeah. How’s Lori Ann? How’s Lori Ann doing? In all reality it’s how both of you are doing. When somebody asks how your wife’s doing, how is she holding up?

Matt Liddle  47:47  

No one, no one cares about the husband. The father.

Lee  47:51  

Yeah, society doesn’t realize that we lost as well. 

Matt Liddle  47:56  

That’s right. I lost my son. I lost my son, but it was completely different with our first miscarriage. I didn’t hear the heartbeat. My wife did. But I didn’t. You know that. And I don’t have any problems with that. But I had that boy in my arms. I’ve never had a father in my life. Bad, bad dude. 

Matt Liddle  48:24  

I was just so excited to just do everything I missed as a child. Getting older, I just want to be able to have a relationship with a child. I watched a movie the other night, and they’re talking about living and dying and faith. The man says, I only want to live at least another 30 years ago. ” The guy asked him, “What the heck are you going to do in those 30 years?” and he says, I just want to see my children grow up. That’s all I want in my entire life. I just want to see them grow up. 

Matt Liddle  49:09  

We’ll never get that chance. It’s really sad. I mean, I hope I do get the chance to have my own children. I’m very blessed that I have someone who’s extremely strong and brave, just even doing the show. 

Matt Liddle  49:28  

In a way. I don’t know if this is part of the advice, but I’ve been avoiding these feelings. I haven’t dealt with anything. I mean, I haven’t slept in four days because of this podcast. Because the reality of it is I’ve been pushing it all to the side. So I can help everybody else. But now when I get home, I’m writing 15 pages on what happened. It changes everything. Even having these pages, I couldn’t read them, right? And it’s unbelievable.

Lee  50:10  

I hope you were able to find something that can help you. I was in that situation, too, I did not want to address many things that were going on with me. Like you said, I push them, I push them back, I push them to the side. They kept piling up. When I was able to actually address them, everything just crashed down. Then I was able to work through them. I hope you were able to find something that you can do to help you. 

Matt Liddle  50:44  

It helps you remember a lot that you really don’t remember. You kind of feel when you’re in the hospital for a couple weeks. Thinking back at the situation, I felt really alone. But then kind of being forced into the situation to look back and think about everything. I realized that I really wasn’t alone. Your mind kind of plays tricks on you too, as well.

Lee  51:15  

It’s very selective. Your mind is very selective. Yeah.

Matt Liddle  51:19  

Exactly. I feel like my wife said, this podcast helps a lot and helps people and I’m like sitting here writing. How and possible, can this help somebody? I’m the kind of person that tells you your story. I’m gonna take that home tonight, like tonight, I’m gonna feel your story because I’m that type of person. 

Matt Liddle  51:46  

Besides your story, me carrying anything and everything out of my head kind of made me feel a little better. It made me feel like, okay, somebody is actually listening. That’s the same shoes as I am. They kind of understand my situation. There is a big difference between females and males, when it comes to situations like this, especially emotions. 

Matt Liddle  52:18  

You can’t really go to your best friend crying as a man, right? I mean.

Lee  52:23  

Yeah. 

Matt Liddle  52:24  

This is one of those situations where you can’t do it alone. But you can’t do that with your wife, at least in my situation, because my wife is so far more advanced than I am in here. She got mad at me one day, because her home screen is Owen. And I’m like, she wanted to show me pictures. I said, I can’t look at that right now. Like, I’m sorry. To her, it was like, You can’t look at your own child? What the heck is your problem?

Matt Liddle  52:54  

But it’s not that I can’t look at my own child, it’s just that I haven’t dealt with the whole situation in general. It’s like avoiding it. I can’t, because I’m too afraid to deal with it. Because I don’t want to feel that pain even more right now. It’s like, you just don’t want to feel pain whatsoever. 

Matt Liddle  53:18  

Then you do learn by talking and stuff like that. The only reason she’s doing better is because she is talking and she is remembering every day. But it’s hard to realize that. Even just to find someone to talk to. I’ve tried to find people to talk to, but everyone’s busy, everyone’s got their own stuff and COVID. 

Matt Liddle  53:43  

When we got discharged from the hospital, COVID the day we left, the hospital stopped taking visitors. So, we’re grieving our child, but then we came out and now we’re grieving our life. Because now we’re like, what happened in the last month, like, where are we? Everything changed. 

Matt Liddle  54:08  

Then we tried to start looking for support groups and they weren’t around because you can’t meet in person. Then time goes by and you don’t even want to do that anymore. I feel like this is where people make a lot of mistakes if they don’t swallow their pride, put everything to the side and really let it out. Talk let’s figure out how to feel better and how to remember your son but not feel so terrible.

Lee  54:47  

Making yourself vulnerable is such a hard thing to do. That’s what this is. What we are doing as when we are reflecting on our sons when we are reflecting upon the situation. We are completely vulnerable. Because we are on the cusp of breaking down we are on the cusp of crying, and just breaking down and becoming vulnerable to our friends to our family to, to random strangers is, it’s hard to do.

Lee  55:23  

It wasn’t until I started seeing a professional therapist, and I felt I could break down in front of them. They weren’t going to be there to judge me. They weren’t there either. Yeah, I was paying. I was paying the therapist to listen to me. But I honestly felt that, that my therapist, that she was there, and she genuinely felt concern for me. 

Matt Liddle  55:51  

Were you that kind of guy that would never do something like that before?

Lee  55:54  

Yeah, yeah, it took a long time for me to go actually, to a therapist. There’s, I don’t know, I’m sure New York has grief support. Like, in Utah, there are two grief support groups, shared by parents. Then like, Oh, I can’t remember exactly what their names are. But they’re now starting to meet online, because we still can’t meet in person. But they have just a monthly meeting where parents who have suffered loss can come together.

Lee  55:57  

Winter and I started going to that. There were a lot of mothers there. But there were a couple fathers there too. It was good to see. I’m a dad, he’s a dad, we’ve both lost. We don’t necessarily have to talk to each other. But it’s good to be in the same room. It’s good to be in the same video chat. Yeah, it’s hard. It’s hard because yeah, you do feel alone, you do feel abandoned. You do feel forgotten. Nobody does ask you. Nobody. Nobody does ask the Father. They always inquire about the mother. 

Matt Liddle  57:13  

Exactly. Right. 

Lee  57:14  

But what’s,–

Matt Liddle  57:16  

You’ll never get a random text message. Maybe we saw your own mom in general, your own mother. Oh, hey, how are you? Okay, today with Owen ? In the meantime, the wife’s got about 45 contacts that are like, Hey, are you okay? 

Lee  57:35  

Yeah. And it really is. My wife is part of a loss moms group that gets together once a month for dinner. Before COVID they were really religious about getting together for dinner. They would text each other. During COVID, all of a sudden, instead of texting each other three times a day, they’re texting each other 50 times a day. I haven’t received probably one more than 10 texts ever. Yeah, it’s hard for us because we’ve lost too. We’ve lost too.

Matt Liddle  58:16  

That is so true. When I met my wife, I was in a time where I felt so alone to begin with I had nothing and nobody. You meet this woman who literally just transforms your life and makes you see life in a completely different way. It’s absolutely amazing how one person can completely, completely change your life. One person, and I’m kind of hoping that this podcast is that one person. That helps me like, my ego stuff’s got to go away. I got to go and get help. I need to talk to somebody because it’s just, you can’t do it alone. 

Lee  59:13  

No, you can’t. 

Matt Liddle  59:14  

And you can talk to your wife. But

Lee  59:17  

But your wife, you’re together. 

Matt Liddle  59:20  

Yeah. 

Lee  59:22  

It’s sort of one of those you, you and your wife are one entity. So it’s not really you’re talking to other people you’re talking to–You’re talking to each other, 

Matt Liddle  59:34  

Yourself. 

Lee  59:35  

Yeah, basically yourself. 

Matt Liddle  59:36  

Yeah, definitely. 

Lee  59:40  

Of course, and I’m not trying to downplay the help your wife gives to you or the help my wife gives to me. But getting an outsider to help you is different too. So.

Matt Liddle  59:54  

Yeah, because even different grieving processes. She may be headed towards me and I say something else. It really bothered me, I’m not ready for it. And she’s like, what the heck, and then you kind of feel like shoot. She’s so ahead of me and I’m like, dang. It started to get you going so like, you’re you do need that outside person that isn’t dealing with the same exact situation with you, with your baby. And they’re further along with the grief and grieving process, because she may not.

Matt Liddle  1:00:34  

You may get into a fight, because she may not understand the way you’re feeling. She may say, You’re not crying right now, you don’t care. But no, that’s not right. It’s just you’re grieving, here me, I saw this. But now I’m thinking about the Dallas Cowboys. I’m thinking about my football game, because I’m too afraid to think about what you’re thinking about. It’s not that I don’t care, but we’re just two completely different stages. 

Matt Liddle  1:01:03  

I feel like it’s so important to talk with your partner to talk about different grieving stages, because I may be really pissed. I may be really angry when someone says something about Owen or something. And she may not be and she may not understand because I’m in a different grieving spot. Yeah. And if you have that outside person, they’re not grieving for you. So you’re gonna get what you need to hear. Then my wife has emotions, and she feels hurt when I say things because she thinks maybe I’ll think you don’t care about your child, because you’re not crying. Well, no, I care so much that I can’t even dream about thinking about it, because I’m going to cry.

Lee  1:01:54  

The grieving process and how different people grieve it’s so different. Going back to, right after the birth, and when we were discharged from the hospital, I was a man on a mission on how to, I had to find a burial plot. I was up in the morning, I was doing everything I could to plan the funeral. Once that funeral was done, I was lost again. Then it, yeah, there was no purpose. But when I have a purpose, I’m a man on a mission. My wife when she has a purpose, she’s and we’re just in two completely different spots, because she was able to do this. I was able to do this. And it really is like, people mourn differently. People mourn at different rates. People feel things differently. People process those feelings differently. It’s hard to say, well, I’m here, you should be here with me. Because we’re not the same. 

Matt Liddle  1:03:05  

No, no, and we could have been to the same thing at the same exact time. And we still can be in different places. Everybody’s body is different. I mean, my wife actually gets physically sick, physically, when she gets overwhelmed with stuff with Owen. I mean, everybody is so different. 

Matt Liddle  1:03:31  

I feel like that’s why it’s so hard to talk to people about this situation. Because everyone’s all over the place only like you, you can talk about these things, right? You’re on the podcast, you’re moving forward. Me? I’m starting to read a piece of paper and I like passed out. I gotta call the cops. Cause it’s like the fear stills you is unbelievable. I’ve seen a lot of bad things in my life. I’ve been in a lot of bad places growing up. I’ve had a lot of bad things happen. And nothing compares. 

Lee  1:04:16  

No.

Matt Liddle  1:04:17  

Nothing. Nothing. I had a gun shot at me and my friend at the same exact time we kind of did the same thing. I mean, it was a little different. Something like this was the pain that is so embedded in your heart. It’s like, I don’t know. The sad part is if you’re not a part about this club. You really have no idea about it. You don’t really know what these people go through. Yeah, they lost their son. 

Matt Liddle  1:04:50  

I had someone say9 to me, just recently it’s been a year since you lost your child and you’re going on this podcast Why? Are you ever going to start moving on? And I was taken back, like, moving on? What do you mean? When are you going to start preparing for your future? Well, listen, I’m trying to prepare for my future. This step is a step forward for me. 

Matt Liddle  1:05:23  

I’m sitting here with you right now talking to you about something that, honestly, I couldn’t say two sentences without breaking down. To me that’s positive. That’s gaining. I’m gaining. I’m getting better. Yeah and people somehow still want to judge you where you’re at. That has never been in the situation itself, and they can’t truly understand. It makes it even harder. 

Matt Liddle  1:05:51  

Because as a man, you feel even more alone. You’re like, wow, stop being a punk. It was a year ago. I understand that, but I can’t help it. I can’t help that I had the worst childhood of my life. I had a really bad childhood.All I’ve ever dreamed of was doing homework with my child throwing a ball with my child. So, when I found out I was having a boy, I was just like, Whoa! This is the best. I get to do everything that I missed out, like GI Joes. I didn’t do any of that stuff. The only time I’m gonna be a kid again. I’m all Yeah! There’s so many different emotions.

Lee  1:06:39  

Yeah. Losing a child is not like having a bike stolen. Yeah, you could easily get over a bike being stolen, you could easily get over having your car break down. You can move on from those things. Losing a child is losing dreams. It’s losing. Like you were saying that you thought of being able to play with your child to help your child. You’re losing all that you’re losing a future.

Matt Liddle  1:07:08  

That is right. Yeah, you plan for your future. That’s part of your plan. You’re gonna have a child. So you’re looking at your future like it’s ruined.

Lee  1:07:17  

Yeah, you’re not, you’re not losing your whole future. You’re not losing the future. You’re losing a future. 

Matt Liddle  1:07:25  

Yeah, it is. I wish more people would understand that we have feelings too. We’ve had people ask us like, Oh, I’m gonna put it in a– and it was on Owen’s birthday. We got a message. Oh, I’m gonna put a pregnancy announcement out. Is that okay? Why are you asking me? That’s your life’s dreams and your dreams. My dreams are completely different. 

Matt Liddle  1:08:01  

People treat you differently. They don’t know how to act around you. Even family get quieter. They don’t know what to say to you. Some people think they can relate to you by saying Oh, one of my friends just lost their child or all these things. Well to me what bothers me is why can’t we go back to the way things were before. 

Matt Liddle  1:08:32  

The thing will never go back to before, but with all input the relationships with I had my say. Let’s say my mother and father in law are some of my old best friends. It seems like it never went back to normal. They look at you like you’re a damaged goods and they kind of are afraid to talk to I guess, I don’t know.

Lee  1:08:56  

It really is one of those people don’t know how to react and interact with you. Not with you, you but with us, people who have lost. Because they don’t know, is this a topic we could talk about? Is it a topic that’s going to cause you stress? Like you said, sometimes you just want to have a normal conversation. But sometimes people don’t know how to do that. I often just say these friends were friends that I had good friendships with. Now that has changed. I have to realize I am a different person and they are a different person. It’s sometimes hard to see those things disappear. Those friendships disappear. 

Matt Liddle  1:09:47  

I’m sorry. Still the same person just a little damaged.

Lee  1:09:52  

I wouldn’t say damaged. You’re changing. Sure you are training, you’re not damaged.

Matt Liddle  1:09:59  

True.

Lee  1:10:00  

You have gone through something so traumatic, you have gone through something that has shaken you and destroyed you. You are trying to rebuild who you are, and understand who you are.

Matt Liddle  1:10:14  

But how can you do that when your whole past? Everyone around you doesn’t treat you like who you are? 

Lee  1:10:22  

Yeah, yeah. And sometimes you just have to just say, this is what I want to be. And this is how I need to be. And this is how I will be. Sometimes it’s hard to make your body do what your mind tells you to do. And sometimes it’s hard to tell your mind what your body needs you to do. So sort of one of those circular logics, we could talk for, who knows how many more hours? It’s probably getting late back on the east coast. I don’t want to hold you hostage for the rest of your life.

Matt Liddle  1:11:02  

No, I mean, I just want to appreciate you guys for being so strong and brave, because that’s another thing with my wife. That shows me each time she talks about Owen or anything that has to do with child loss and stuff. To me that is teaching me something. I’m looking at her and saying, Wow, she’s strong. She is so brave, but she’s got no clue that she’s strong and brave. You could tell her all the time. 

Matt Liddle  1:11:34  

I just want to thank you, because it takes a lot of courage, acceptance. It’s a lot. I don’t know how long exactly how you’ve been doing this before. But I’m sure it’s a lot coming on all the time and speaking about your story and talking about it. I commend you guys. And if it wasn’t for people, like you, people like me wouldn’t get any better. You’re setting the examples of where I can learn where I could be okay. I’m not alone. I just need to meet the right people and talk to the right people. Maybe I’m not this screwed up for the rest of my life. It gives me a kind of hope that I’ll be okay. So, thank you for real man. I mean it.

Lee  1:12:31  

Matt, this is the reason why we set this podcast up so that we can reach out and together talk about our children. And through that talking, we can heal a little bit, we will be able to help those around us who are also struggling. Right now, you might not feel that you can help anybody who has also suffered, but in the future, you will be able to. You will be able to say hey, this has happened to me. This is what I have done. I hope my experiences helped a little bit.

Matt Liddle  1:13:05  

Yeah, like I said, you guys are amazing.

Lee  1:13:11  

Well, Matt, thank you so much for talking with me. Thank you. 

Matt Liddle  1:13:16  

Thank you.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: birth story, early neonatal infant death (<7 days), infant death, podcast episode Tagged With: infant loss

Owen David | A Mom’s Early Term Birth Story and Baby Death at 26 Weeks

February 7, 2022 by Winter

Lori Ann tells of her journey through infertility, miscarriage, and complications with her next pregnancy, which included putting in a cerclage due to an incompetent cervix and later her water breaking at 21 weeks. Instead of terminating the pregnancy, Lori Ann and her husband Matt decided to wait to see what would happen, monitoring her temperature to make sure she didn’t develop an infection. At 24 weeks, she was admitted until Owen was born at 26 weeks via emergency C-section. Owen was 2 lb and they were able to see Owen open his eyes, but he was struggling to breath on his own. They decided to remove the breathing tube, and she was able to hold him till he passed away.

Watch here (YouTube):

Listen here (podcast):

Time Stamps:

00:00 Baby’s name
01:47 Who the parents are
06:45 First Loss
12:29 Owen’s Pregnancy
34:14 Gender
42:54 Short Cervix
48:02 Water Breaking
1:08:47 Final Hospital Stay
1:14:53 C- Section
1:21:12 Meeting Owen
1:38:58 Time to go
1:42:20 Cremated

You might appreciate these other episodes:

  • Watch/listen Matt’s (Lori Ann’s husband) birth episode of son Owen: Click here
  • Watch/listen to Bianca’s and Michael’s advice episode after Jalen’s death: Click here

Wanna help?

  • DONATE! Consider giving a one-time or recurring donation to help with production and hosting costs: Click here for more information.
  • SUBSCRIBE! Head over here to subscribe to our YouTube channel and our podcasts (Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts).
  • SHARE! Spread the word to a loss mom or dad, or those who may be supporting a bereaved parent. Send them a link to this post. Pin one of our graphics on Pinterest.
Lori Ann with Owen

Full Transcription:


Lori Ann 0:00
Owen David.

Lori Ann 0:08
When I first saw him, the first thing I noticed was his cute little nose. And I was actually kind of shocked with how much hair he had. And just his tiny little fingers. You know, every little feature when a baby’s that small, like two pounds, it’s just amazing how they are just a little human. They’re just so tiny, but I can just remember all of his features on his face, his lips, nose and eyes. They were just perfect.

Winter 0:47
Welcome to Still A Part of Us a place where moms and dads share the story of their child who was stillborn or who died in infancy.

Winter 0:53
I’m winter.

Lee 0:54
And I’m Lee, we are grateful you joined us today. Please know that this is a story of loss and has triggers.

Winter 1:00
Thanks to our lost parents who are willing to be vulnerable and share their children with us.

Lee 1:04
If you’re listening to this podcast, just know that on our YouTube channel, there are pictures and videos that are related to the stories that are being shared.

Winter 1:11
Subscribe and share it with a friend that might need it and tell them to subscribe. Why? Because people need to know that even though our babies are no longer with us, they’re still a part of us.

Winter 1:26
Lori Ann, thank you so much for coming on to the podcast today. I am just so glad that you reached out and are willing to come in and tell your story today. So welcome to the podcast. Yes, thank you. Can you tell us a little bit about who you are and what you do on a daily basis? Who’s in your family right now?

Lori Ann 1:47
Um, okay. So my husband and I met online actually on a dating website. Things progressed pretty quickly, which we were a little nervous at first, but you know, it ended up working out. After a couple of months, we moved in together, and we’ve been together ever since. That’s been eight years now.

Lori Ann 2:15
It’s just my husband. We have two dogs, which are pretty much basically our kids. They’re our lives. I don’t know what I would do without them actually, like they keep us going really. We live in the country kind of so it’s very secluded. We definitely really like that lifestyle, we enjoy being outdoors, hiking and doing all those fun things. For work, I am an ABA therapist. So I work with kids between the ages of two and five. We work on preparing them to go to school, and the kids have autism. So it’s a very challenging, but fun and rewarding job.

Winter 3:15
Oh, I’m sure it is.

Lori Ann 3:17
Yeah.

Winter 3:17
That’s awesome. Of course, you’re doing a lot of this right online at this current time or are you meeting people in person?

Lori Ann 3:26
We are actually. I go to an in center, some ABA therapists go in home. When COVID first happened. Well, Owen was actually born on March 10, of 2020. And two days after he was born was when they shut down.

Winter 3:50
Everything.

Lori Ann 3:50
Pretty much like the world.

Winter 3:52
Yeah.

Lori Ann 3:53
So my job had shut down for a couple of months, but I was on maternity leave, like already at that point. So I wasn’t really affected by that because I was already out. But then my job is considered medically necessary because Autism is a medical diagnosis. So they went back to work pretty quickly. I mean, I didn’t go back to work pretty quickly.

Winter 4:34
We’ll get into that a little bit more. So-

Lori Ann 4:36
-Yeah, we can get but um, we are in person and I work in a center. There’s just the three of us. So like three adults and three kids and then our boss.

Winter 4:49
Yeah.

Lori Ann 4:50
So yeah, we are in person. And yeah, I mean, I could go home, but I definitely prefer the center.

Winter 5:02
Okay. Okay, that’s good to know. What part of the country are you located? You can just give me generalities.

Lori Ann 5:09
Yeah we’re in New Jersey.

Winter 5:12
Okay. So back east there. Sounds like you and your husband like to do outdoor things, you have dogs and everything, any other hobbies that you guys like to do by yourself? Or together?

Lori Ann 5:26
We love watching different movies. It used to be Netflix a lot but Netflix, I don’t know, they’re kind of being a little weird. You know, wherever we can get some good movies.

Winter 5:43
Yeah.

Lori Ann 5:43
Definitely hiking with the dogs. Family means a lot to me. So we actually spend a lot of time with our families.

Winter 5:57
Are both sides of the family nearby?

Lori Ann 6:01
Matt’s mom is about a half hour away from us. Then my parents are an hour away from us.

Winter 6:08
Okay.

Lori Ann 6:09
But I mean I drive an hour to work every day.

Winter 6:12
I was like, that’s probably nothing for you.

Lori Ann 6:14
Yeah, that’s normal.

Winter 6:16
Yeah. Well, great. You did mention that Owen was born in March of 2020. So it’s at the time of this recording. It’s been about a year since he was born. Tell me, were you guys planning on getting pregnant? How did the birth? How did the pregnancy go? Was that something that you guys were hoping to have happen?

Lori Ann 6:45
Yes, I’m in 2015. We actually got pregnant on our own, and we were never not not trying. So we found out we were pregnant. Our wedding was actually in nine months. So our baby would have been due almost a couple of days before our wedding day.

Winter 7:14
Really?

Lori Ann 7:15
Yes. So that was a little bit of a shock. We moved things around and we moved the wedding up, and we did all these things, but then we ended up miscarrying at eight weeks.

Winter 7:32
Oh, I’m sorry to hear that.

Lori Ann 7:34
I mean, we never found out why, or what happened or anything like that. I really feel like at that stage of our life, I had no idea. Anything about pregnancy. Like how difficult it would be to get pregnant. Or, honestly, how being able to get pregnant and carry a child is a miracle to me really. I know it happens all the time. I don’t know, it’s just not as easy as I feel like some people make it seem, at least for us.

Winter 8:23
Yeah, I completely agree with you on that. It is a miracle when babies get here safely.

Lori Ann 8:28
Yeah, it really is. I feel like when we had our loss, that was very hard for us. We kept our wedding moved up, because we needed something positive. So we decided instead of doing the April wedding, like we moved our wedding to November, and we kept it there. I’m glad we did because, you know, we just got married faster. Then it was fun. We saw all our family and everything like that. So that happened.

Winter 9:10
Actually, Lori Ann, I can ask you a question?

Lori Ann 9:12
Yeah.

Winter 9:12
Did people know that you guys were pregnant? Or did you kind of hold on to that for just a little bit and just started rearranging your wedding date?

Lori Ann 9:20
Because of the timing that had happened? I found out pretty early. When I went to my OB I was four weeks when I found out I was pregnant the first time. That’s when I was like, oh my gosh, like we’re gonna have to tell people because we’re gonna have to move the wedding like we can’t-

Winter 9:45
Yeah.

Lori Ann 9:46
We already booked the place and had our date and everything. So it never really crossed my mind that something would go wrong. Again, where that’s where I feel like we just really had no idea.

Winter 10:05
Yeah.

Lori Ann 10:06
You think you get pregnant and it’s like, oh, we’re gonna have a baby-

Winter 10:11
-everything’s gonna be fine.

Lori Ann 10:12
Yeah. So we did tell our family because we had to move our wedding up. So everybody already knew why we had to move the date.

Winter 10:26
Okay.

Lori Ann 10:26
So yes, everybody knew. Then everybody knew obviously that we had lost the baby. So, yeah, everybody. I mean, I’m pretty open with my family. So they pretty much know everything.

Winter 10:45
Did you feel like they were supportive? At that time when you guys had your first loss?

Lori Ann 10:50
Well, it’s kind of funny when we were on vacation with my family when we told them, and I can remember my dad kind of got a little mad. I don’t think that he was mad, but I think he was like, Why couldn’t you guys just wait till you’re married type of thing. He got over that within 20 minutes. Then he was like, I’m gonna be a grandpa. Then he was happy.

Winter 11:21
Yeah.

Lori Ann 11:21
My mom was ecstatic. My brother and my sister were ecstatic. Everybody was very happy for us. I feel like that loss I heard a lot. Oh, it happens to a lot of women, or it happens in the early stages. Things that people normally say that think that they’re trying to help.

Winter 11:53
Yeah,

Lori Ann 11:55
I mean, everybody was very supportive and understanding. My mom actually bought us little angel wings on our wedding day. I had my angel wings tucked in my wedding dress. Then Matt had his angel wings tucked in his suit pocket.

Winter 12:21
Nice.

Lori Ann 12:21
So, you know, that was like, our little remembrance for our baby that we lost.

Winter 12:27
Yeah.

Lori Ann 12:29
After that, though we were like, let’s just try again.

Winter 12:35
Okay, so you guys were just like, let’s do it. Let’s-

Lori Ann 12:37
-Yeah, we’re like, we know we want to have a kid, let’s try again. We tried for a year, but nothing happened. I always had issues and it just wasn’t happening. After a year or two, we were like, okay, maybe we should, you know, talk to the doctor and see if something’s wrong. I don’t think it should take two years for us to get pregnant again.

Winter 13:13
Yeah.

Lori Ann 13:15
So, I went to my OB and then we ran the regular tests and everything. Then Matt had to have a test and we found out that we both have issues. So with both the issues that we had, we were batting like 1% chance of us getting pregnant on our own.

Winter 13:39
Okay.

Lori Ann 13:41
They said that it was shocking that we did get pregnant on our own the first time.

Winter 13:47
Oh, okay.

Lori Ann 13:48
Yeah. So we were then referred to a fertility doctor. So we started seeing a fertility doctor. They decided, well, no, my insurance decided. Because you know how that goes?

Winter 14:07
Yeah.

Lori Ann 14:08
Insurance decided that we would have to do like three rounds of insemination. Then if that didn’t work, then we could go to IVF.

Winter 14:18
Okay.

Lori Ann 14:19
My doctors were thinking that IVF was going to be our best shot, and that insemination wouldn’t be your best shot. But we had to do the three rounds before insurance would cover the IVF

Winter 14:36
I see.

Lori Ann 14:39
I have always been very open about our journey starting at that point. By then we’d been married for a couple years. People are always like, “Where’s the baby?” Like, “When are you gonna have a baby?” Like, “What are you waiting for?” Then I would get so angry, almost like, I wouldn’t know what to say sometimes I would just be like it’s not always easy. Like, we’re struggling, okay. Like, it’s not like we’re trying.

Winter 15:16
Yeah. Yeah. Yes, it is, oh, you always feel a little like, gosh, you are probing into our very into our reproductive life really a lot by asking that question.

Lori Ann 15:29
Yeah. It’s not even that it’s just, I don’t know, again, I feel like I’ve learned going through this journey that it’s not necessarily the best question to ask couples sometimes.

Winter 15:44
Yes.

Lori Ann 15:45
Especially to just blurt out, like, “What are you doing? Like, “Why aren’t you having kids?” I get it, people want to know when it’s fine. But I was like, I’m done. I’m not gonna pretend like everything’s okay. I don’t want to have to be ashamed of myself because of not being able to be pregnant yet. I want people to understand that it’s not always going to be, let’s do it. Then we’re gonna get pregnant.

Lori Ann 16:24
So that’s when I started to be pretty open on social media, about our journey. I started sharing our journey with all of our friends and family online. I pretty much shared every step of the way with each insemination that we went through.

Lori Ann 16:48
The first one, it didn’t work. Then we just went right into our second one. That one didn’t work. The doctors were not optimistic about the third one working. So when we did our third one, I was like, okay, then after this, we can move to IVF. I was like, so let’s get started now. So then, because you always have that two week wait. You have the insemination. Then you have to wait two weeks to find out if it’s negative or positive.

Winter 17:29
Then you can start all the medications and everything.

Lori Ann 17:33
Yeah, but I wanted to be prepared right after that. That whole two week time I was sad to say I wasn’t really optimistic about it. I was more focused on IVF. They gave us all the paperwork, I had already picked up some of the meds. I had my schedule with the doctors.

Lori Ann 18:04
Then I can remember three days before or something like that. Before I had my beta day where they check your hormone levels. I didn’t feel right. I kept having this weird twinge in my stomach. I don’t know, signs that could be your period, or it could be you’re pregnant because they’re all the same sign.

Lori Ann 18:33
Right?

Lori Ann 18:36
Then I did, I ended up taking a test and it had two lines. And I was like, this can’t be real. Like, wait a second. I went up to Matt and I smacked him. I was like, Do you see this? It has two lines! Then he’s like, okay, so this is good? I’m like do you see this? It was a complete shock moment.

Winter 19:11
Right?

Lori Ann 19:13
It’s faulty. Give me another one. I literally took like, three.

Winter 19:22
Like I gotta make sure.

Lori Ann 19:26
Exactly. So I actually called the doctor. I’m like, I know you tell us not to take it early, but I took the test. She’s like, “Okay, well, let’s just wait two days. You have your blood work tests.” So, two days. Alright, so I took like, you know, 20 more pregnancy tests in between. How do you not?

Winter 19:55
Yeah, exactly.

Lori Ann 20:00
The line did get darker every day after that. So we did go in for my blood work. Then when you have your bloodwork done, the fertility clinic has until 7pm to call you back, right? You get your blood work drawn at 6am. And they literally have up to 7pm to call you back with the result. So we’re sitting at home. It’s like, one o’clock comes, three o’clock comes. Like, don’t you think this is something that they would want to call us and tell us now? Why are they-

Winter 20:45
Making us wait?

Lori Ann 20:46
Yeah, so finally we got the call. The nurse that we spoke to is like, congratulations, you’re pregnant. I was like, What? And she’s like, you’re pregnant. And I was like-

Winter 21:03
You’re still in shock about it?

Lori Ann 21:05
Yeah. I was like, Okay, thanks. She’s like, Well, congratulations. And I’m like, Okay, thanks. Then we hung up and Matt of course, standing there, looked at me. I can just remember, like, I was frozen. I was like, we’re pregnant. He’s like, well, why do you look like that? I’m like, I mean, this is what we’ve wanted all along. Now what do we do? Like, you know, it had taken so long to get that. That pregnant positive, and I was like, I didn’t prepare for when it actually did happen.

Winter 21:51
Isn’t that funny?

Lori Ann 21:57
So now what? It did take me a few minutes to soak it in.

Winter 22:04
Yeah.

Lori Ann 22:05
Then like, he’s like, Okay, well, are you gonna call your mom and dad? And I was like, yeah. So i called my mom and dad and they were waiting for me to call them. They knew we are getting the results.

Winter 22:19
Okay.

Lori Ann 22:20
So when my mom picked up, I actually started crying. To the point where I couldn’t talk crying. Later, my mom told me, she’s like, I literally was thinking in my head, like, how am I going to comfort her? She thought I was crying because I had bad news.

Winter 22:46
Oh, yeah.

Lori Ann 22:48
So I was like, we’re pregnant. She’s like, oh, my God and my dad’s in the background, like, yay! They were screaming they were so excited. Both of my parents are so amazing. They’re going to be the best grandparents in the entire world. They are just so excited to be grandparents.

Winter 23:18
Yeah.

Lori Ann 23:21
I was super excited. Then I was like, okay, chill out, everybody. It’s early. Because then I have in my head we had an early miscarriage the last time.

Winter 23:36
Right.

Lori Ann 23:37
So of course, that fear took over. But obviously, we are excited at the same time. Like, this is what we’ve been waiting for. Doesn’t matter that we have IVF meds in the fridge that we spent money on. Yes, we were going to need it, but now we don’t. But that’s okay, because we’re pregnant.

Lori Ann 24:02
When you see a fertility doctor, they see you until like, eight or nine weeks. They see you very regularly. So when you first find out that you’re pregnant, it’s like super early. They make you wait like a week or two I forget before your first ultrasound. Then that first ultrasound is really they just want to start to see like the sack growing

Winter 24:35
Right.

Lori Ann 24:36
Then the next one after that would be the heartbeat. The one after that it’s like you graduate. The first time we went, my doctor wasn’t too pleased. She said that they should be able to see the fetal pole or whatever starting to grow. She wasn’t sure if it was going to make it. That was very, very hard to like, hear. It’s just, you know, you think the two week wait is hard. But I felt like it was even harder to wait for a time like that when you’d like to hear the heartbeat for the first time.

Winter 25:29
Right.

Lori Ann 25:30
Sometimes I think it’s like, they check you too often with fertility doctors, because a normal person wouldn’t really go see the OB until, I don’t even know, like eight, nine week.

Winter 25:46
Yeah, it’s a bit later.

Lori Ann 25:48
Yeah. Don’t they tell you to like, wait a little bit?

Winter 25:52
Yeah. They do.

Lori Ann 25:48
So I can remember, we did finally get to hear the heartbeat. We both cried during that ultrasound, including Matt. That was a good positive step. Then I can remember the day we were supposed to go to graduate. Like graduating to go to your OB. I had woken up and I had some bleeding. It was at eight weeks. I woke up and was supposed to be going to the fertility doctor to graduate. I woke up and that was happening. I literally was just like it’s done. It’s over. That our drive to that fertility doctor, I just bawled my eyes out, like, so scared.

Lori Ann 26:10
So was it quite a bit of bleeding? Or was it spotting?

Lori Ann 27:03
No, it was a decent amount and that’s why I was like, this is it. You know what I mean? That was just like my first thought, like, eight weeks. This is when we lost our first baby. This is just like how it is. I can remember going to the fertility clinic. The vibe is very somber, and very heavy. When you go to a place like that. I was just sitting in the waiting room crying, there was no holding it back anymore. It was very hard to wait the 20 minutes or whatever they made me wait before I could go in to see the doctor.

Lori Ann 27:55
But we got in there. The doctor asked me what’s going on? I told her and through tears by the way, I’m still crying. So they’re like, all right, like, let’s take a look and see what’s going on. So they do the ultrasound, and then all of the sudden I can just remember the first thing they do is check for the heartbeat. She turned it up really loud. He had a strong heartbeat like it was just beautiful. To be able to finally be like he’s still there. We didn’t know what it was here. But I was like, the baby is still there. They’re so tiny at that stage that I think even in one of the pictures they look like little gummy bears kind of like getting that to the stage.

Winter 29:04
Yeah.

Winter 29:04
That’s one of my favorite pictures, like ultrasound pictures. Because he literally looks like a gummy bear. Even at that little stage he was wiggling around and it was just so special. I was so glad that I had that. Like got to see. Especially so early on and I’m like, Is that that is the baby moving? She’s like, yeah, like he’s like dancing around right now. Like, so awesome. I’m like that’s inside me. She’s like, yeah. How is that possible? I guess I had like, I don’t know what it’s called. I got like a clot or-

Winter 30:09
Hemorrhage or something? Okay.

Lori Ann 30:11
Yeah and they saw it in the ultrasound.

Winter 30:15
Okay.

Lori Ann 30:16
They said it was small and that it should resolve on its own.

Winter 30:21
Okay.

Lori Ann 30:23
Which it did. I only like bled for another day. Then I was okay after that I didn’t bleed anymore. So I felt much better.

Winter 30:33
Yeah. Was Matt at that appointment with you?

Lori Ann 30:38
Yes.

Winter 30:39
Okay.

Lori Ann 30:39
He was.

Winter 30:41
I’m sure he was relieved too.

Lori Ann 30:44
Yes, he was crying.

Winter 30:46
Okay.

Lori Ann 30:48
Um, I feel like Matt has, every ultrasound has been very hard. Because when we found out that we had the miscarriage, we went to the hospital to get bloodwork or the ultrasound done. And the techs can’t tell you anything, right?

Winter 31:08
Yep, they’re not supposed to

Lori Ann 31:10
No they’re not supposed to. So this tech turned with, like, we had the screen facing us. I had heard the heartbeat the week before, but Matt didn’t. This is for the first baby. All of a sudden, the tech kind of turned the screen, right. We can’t really see anything anymore now on the screen. Matt just remembers her writing, like NFR. He googled it and it’s no fetal, or whatever this thing was. It’s no fetal heart rate, or whatever the term was. He saw her type that in, but she didn’t, she couldn’t tell us that.-

Winter 32:02
Yeah.

Lori Ann 32:02
That happened. So ultrasounds now just petrify him. Because that’s what he remembers. So he, every ultrasound, he literally would hold his breath. Then every time as soon as we could hear the sound, he’d be like, visibly and very loudly let out-

Winter 32:32
A huge sigh of relief, right?

Lori Ann 32:34
Yes. So, yeah, so we graduated that day, they let us go to our obgyn. So then our 12 week appointment, everything was fine. They were telling us we had to wait until 20 weeks to find out the gender. I, of course, was too impatient to do that. So I did like a private scan or whatever for the gender reveal. That was really special because you know you’re with them for like an hour. They do like 3-D photos. They have just all the video I mean, we even got his heartbeat but- I am obsessed with turtles and we got his heartbeat put into a stuffed animal turtle. It was amazing. Because again you see this little body moving around and I couldn’t really feel him yet at that point. But that is when we found out that he was a boy. And-

Winter 33:59
How early was that?

Lori Ann 34:01
16 weeks.

Winter 34:02
16 Okay.

Lori Ann 34:03
Yeah, cause they won’t. At least this place wouldn’t see us until we were 16 weeks to do the gender reveal part of it.

Winter 34:13
Yeah.

Lori Ann 34:14
Um, so we found out the gen- like my husband and I found out he was a boy. Then I was like, Alright, we have to surprise my parents. So I didn’t tell my parents when we were going to find out the gender. My brother’s girlfriend at the time I told her and she got the pinata and filled it all with blue stuff and confetti and everything.

Lori Ann 34:51
Then it was actually on New Year’s Eve that we got to like, we’ve had My parents hit the pinata. My brother and my sister were there to find out the gender. My dad broke it. And all the blue fell out. He just was like, oh boy, I’m gonna have a grandson. So my dad was so thrilled, and so is my mom.

Lori Ann 35:38
For the rest of the night, I’m not even kidding you. Like, all I heard all night. My dad just kept rewatching the video. It was so sweet though. I’m like, really dad, again. He’s like, this is my grandson. This is my grandson. Don’t you touch that food or don’t you eat!

Winter 36:03
That is so sweet.

Lori Ann 36:05
Yeah, he was super excited. I had always known if I had a boy, I just always knew Owen was going to be his name. Matt didn’t really have a choice. In that sense.

Winter 36:24
Sorry, Matt.

Lori Ann 36:25
Yeah, sorry. But Owen has just- I don’t know why I just always loved that name. Obviously, his name is gonna be Owen. Matt and I had talked before that, that we were going to ask my dad if it would be okay, if we used his name as his middle name. I asked him and his eyes filled with tears because he was so honored that we would want our son’s middle name to be David. He just kept saying “Are you sure?” Like, yeah. Why? We wouldn’t be asking you if we weren’t sure.

Winter 37:28
Oh, that’s so sweet.

Lori Ann 37:29
Oh, of course he was beyond thrilled about that. I really had it. I don’t think I really had a difficult pregnancy. I mean, I was sick for maybe about a week. But that was pretty much it. I feel like I had the weirdest craving for ice water. Oh, yeah, it just sounded good. It just had to be extremely cold ice water. I’ve never heard that one before, honestly. I kept making a big deal about it. I bought all these ice cube trays. Matt became a pro at filling these ice cube trays and having them all set and ready because I would drink so much of it. He figured out a system to always make sure I had enough ice in the freezer, so I would never run out.

Winter 38:43
That’s a good husband right there.

Lori Ann 38:44
Oh, yes, he definitely was.

Lori Ann 38:48
But because I said to my husband, I’m not craving food. I don’t have a food craving. He goes “You’re craving ice water. You don’t know how many times a day you ask for ice water. That seems to be your craving.”

Winter 39:09
Oh, that’s funny. You didn’t even notice it?

Lori Ann 39:11
I did. Well, because I thought it would be food.

Winter 39:15
Yeah, exactly.

Lori Ann 39:23
I started to feel some movement around 17-18 weeks. It’s so little at that point. I never made it that far in a pregnancy.

Winter 39:38
Yeah, so you’re unsure what it’s supposed to be like?

Lori Ann 39:41
Yeah. Like is that gas or is that I don’t know. Maybe? I’m just gonna go with yeah, it was him.

Winter 39:52
Yeah, exactly.

Lori Ann 39:54
Then we had our anatomy scan which was at 20 weeks, and we have the same tech as we had for our 12 week scan. She was great because she walked us through everything as she was doing it. I liked that.

Winter 40:19
Yeah, I love that too.

Lori Ann 40:20
Yeah. Everything was perfect. He was measuring perfect. We got pictures of his little feet. His hand, at one point, looked like he was, kind of waving. He always did this thing where he had his hand over his head. Because she’d be like, well, I can’t get a profile picture right now. Because again, he’s got his hand over his head.

Winter 40:56
He’s thinking about stuff.

Lori Ann 40:57
Yeah. But that was cool to see 3D photos then, because we had seen 3D photos at the 16 weeks, and now it was 20 weeks. It’s amazing how quick they grow. I think he weighed about a pound or so at my 20 week. Gee, you know, they check the heart. They like everything. It was just so fascinating. To watch all of it. I was definitely feeling him a lot more at that time. So that was fun too. He would kick the wand thing or whatever.

Winter 41:53
Yeah.

Lori Ann 41:55
But when they check your cervix at that point. So she said she was having trouble seeing my cervix or something. So she said I’m just gonna go get the doctor. As soon as she walked out of the room I looked at Matt and I was like something’s wrong. I was like they’ve never gotten the doctor before. You know what I mean?

Winter 42:31
Yeah, they usually just go sign off the scans or whatever, right?

Lori Ann 42:35
Yeah. So I’m already crying at that point, of course, and the doctor came in, and they had to do another scan. Then they had to do an internal scan. This doctor was pushing on my stomach, so hard it was so painful. To try and get a better view of my cervix. He wasn’t answering any questions, he just kept telling us I’ll answer your questions. We know something’s wrong at this point.

Winter 42:35
Yeah.

Lori Ann 42:54
We get through that. Then he brings up the pictures, because yeah, it’s usually the screen was in front of us, for us to see. He’s well, this is your cervix and it’s measuring short. Then he’s like, “Can you see this line? It should be completely closed, but you have just slightly opening.” I literally at that point was just “Well, what does that mean?” What has happened? What’s happening?

Lori Ann 44:03
He said, “Well get dressed, we’re gonna go into our office.” So, of course I’m bawling my eyes out at that point, petrified of what he was going to say. When we spoke with him, he said that it can happen to women where their cervix might start opening too soon.

Lori Ann 44:34
There’s studies that progesterone could help it. So he said that he would want me to start taking the progesterone. He said that he has seen people have this then they go full term and they’re completely fine. Then there’s the people who they might have to put a stitch in to keep your cervix shut. All these scary other options that he shared, and he’s just do the progesterone for a week and then come back.

Lori Ann 45:15
That’s what we did, I did the progesterone for a week. Then when I went back after that my cervix had started to open more. So, at this point, they again said, you don’t have to do anything, you could just see how it goes. But it’s not good that it had started to open more in just a week, even, with the progesterone to try and help it. Or they could put a stitch in, it’s called a cerclage where they can sew it shut.

Lori Ann 46:00
They said that 80% of women or whatever the percentage was, get the stitch, and then they make it full term, and everything is fine. So I said let’s just do it. I didn’t want to take the chance that you know, something could go wrong, and my water could break, or he could come too soon, and whatnot.

Lori Ann 46:34
So I did that at 21 weeks. I was going out of work because my job is very physical. So my doctors wanted me not on bed rest, but I couldn’t be bending down and picking up kids. That kind of stuff. So they told me they wanted me to be out of work until I turned 28 weeks or something like that. As long as everything looked okay, I could return back to work. So that’s what I did right after the stitch was put in. It was literally February 1 when I had the stitch put in.

Lori Ann 47:26
Then I think it might have been February 5 or so. I was at home. My brother had just visited me. I was going to bed, I laid down and I was like, oh, I don’t know, I just had the weird feeling. Like I just peed myself. I hear sometimes when you’re pregnant you might pee yourself.

Winter 47:56
Sometimes it happens.

Lori Ann 48:02
Yeah, I don’t know what’s normal or not. So I got up and I went to the bathroom. Something wasn’t right. I felt you know what I mean? When something is not right. Honestly, I just decided okay maybe I just peed myself and I cleaned up. Then I went back to bed and I went to lay down. As soon as I went to go lay down again. More came out.

Lori Ann 48:43
I went to the bathroom again. I sat there for probably five minutes. I was just sitting there and I’m just like, this can’t be my water. This can’t be my water. This can’t be my water. No, this can’t be it. I was almost in denial for a little bit. Then I just kind of felt a little more. Slowly coming out.

Lori Ann 49:21
I went into panic mode, and I feel like it’s a blur after that. I’m pretty sure I probably screamed at Matt. I was like something’s really wrong. My water just broke. My waters had just broke. He’s like, “What are you talking about?” Explaining it to him. “We need to go to the hospital. We need to go to the hospital right now. This second.” Matt’s running around like a mad man. Trying to get things together. I just remember standing there, I couldn’t move. I felt paralyzed. It was so scary.

Lori Ann 50:16
I can just remember saying, “This can’t be happening. This isn’t what it is, it was just horrible.” Of course, the hospitals an hour away. So I don’t even know what Matt grabbed, I don’t even think I grabbed anything. I think I barely even got myself in the car. I don’t even know how I did that. But I got to the car. Again, I cried the entire way to the hospital. We were silent. I don’t even think we had the radio on. Matt kept looking at me. But I don’t think we knew what to say to each other. In that moment, because we were so scared of what was happening. I just, it was the longest hour to get there.

Lori Ann 51:20
I had called my OB and the hospital knew we were coming so they were ready for when we got there. They got us into the room. They put the monitor on and they found his heartbeat pretty quickly. So of course that is a relief right there. Okay, he’s alive.

Lori Ann 51:48
It took forever because it was so late at night for one of the doctors to come in and they did a swab. If it turns blue, then that means it’s your fluid, your amniotic fluid. I can just remember her looking at me, and she was just , I’m so sorry, but your water has broken, this is your water.

Lori Ann 52:23
I said a couple of curse words actually. Matt said that all I did was put my hands over my head. I just kept saying the F word over and over and over. I didn’t know what to say. Why? How? Why? Why is this happening? I just had the stitch put on it. Why is this happening?

Lori Ann 53:01
It was too late for- There was no doctor, I guess they’re to talk to us. So they moved us to the labor and delivery section. They explained that two things could happen. They needed to monitor me for an infection. They needed to keep a contraction monitor on. They said to me let us know, if you start to feel contractions. I was like, I don’t know what contractions feel like.

Lori Ann 53:50
I’ve never done this, I don’t know. All anybody ever kept saying was you’ll know. It was just very, I don’t even think we slept that night. It was just because at that point, they didn’t even do an ultrasound. They monitored his heartbeat. They kept the contraction monitor on my stomach. Which one of the nurses came in and they were like, why is your contraction monitor there? I’m like, I don’t know, they’re like, you’re so it needs to be lower because of how far along we were. She made a comment that all the other nurses probably just doesn’t know because this doesn’t usually happen. I’m like,Yeah, I know Okay, this doesn’t normally happen.

Lori Ann 55:00
My parents actually showed up in the middle of the night to the hospital with us. They spent some time with us. We have two dogs, so Matt had to go home to take care of the dogs. Then we realized that the dogs would probably stay with my parents, because we knew we were going to be in the hospital for a little while.

Lori Ann 55:32
We had many tough conversations with so many doctors. Maternal Fetal Medicine, NICU doctors, the OB. It was so overwhelming the amount of information that they gave us. When they did eventually do an ultrasound he had no fluid. There’s just nothing left, really.

Lori Ann 56:07
Oh course, they have to tell you all the scary parts. 21 weeks is not viable for a pregnancy. So they gave us the option to terminate the pregnancy, they told us, we could let mother nature take its course. Those were really two only options, either terminate or wait and see.

Lori Ann 56:43
When the NICU doctor came, I felt like that was the hardest part. Because I just wanted to know if he was in pain. He doesn’t have fluid. What does this mean? They just explained that they need the fluid in order to breathe. They need to be able to drink it, to then be able to let it out. It rotates. When a baby doesn’t have fluid to do that, then issues with the lungs develop or if it’s so tight, they could have clubfoot or, there could be deformities. Because if he’s in one position and can’t move around. All these things, but his heartbeat was strong.

Lori Ann 57:56
When we were there that had been the most I had ever felt him move. Matt and I were like, We can’t end this. I feel him. I’m feeling him inside of me. I can’t let go. I can’t just be sure, let’s just end right now.

Lori Ann 58:28
The doctors even said to us, they were like, if you were one week ahead, we would be like, hang in there. If you were one week before this, we would be like, there’s no hope like you need to end it. But because we were 21 weeks in that weird spot. They were like it could go either way. So there’s no right or wrong answer.

Lori Ann 58:59
As long as he’s not in pain and he’s not in distress we want to let nature take its course. To us, we had to do everything we possibly could in order to try and save him and keep him with us.

Lori Ann 59:25
So we were in the hospital for four days at that point. They were looking for infection and then they were looking for if I would be good to go into labor. I wasn’t going to start dilating because I had the stitch. So we stayed and we made it those four days because they say after those four days, if you made it that far you’re more likely to go at least another week before. They wouldn’t keep us there or see us again until 24 weeks.

Lori Ann 1:00:17
So they were like, go home and wait. They want me to take my temperature twice a day to make sure I didn’t have a fever. If I started to have contractions, if I started bleeding, or you know what I mean? I just had to watch out for all those things. So my parents only live 20 minutes from the hospital, as opposed to an hour for us. So to us, it made sense. To stay with my parents for that time being just in case. Then we would be closer to the hospital. That’s what we did.

Lori Ann 1:01:08
My sister gave up her room. So I had a bed, and I didn’t have to sleep on the couch. My sister and I slept in the same bed the first night. Then she’s like, I can’t sleep with you. I was like, What do you mean, you can’t sleep? I didn’t take up too much room.

Lori Ann 1:01:30
What are you talking about, we always share the bed. She’s like, it kind of made me sad, because she said I was scared that I’m going to hurt you. In the middle of the night. She moved her arm or she kicked me. She was scared that she was going to hurt, oh, or something. So she slept on the couch for the amount of time I was at my parents house.

Lori Ann 1:02:12
In between this time Matt struggled with going to work because he just wanted– he didn’t want to miss a second. He always takes care of me in any situation. He literally is the best husband in the entire world. It doesn’t matter what it is. But he was so on top of everything because they didn’t want me walking around too much.

Lori Ann 1:02:45
He was working nights at that time. So he tried working for a little while working nights and then coming home and taking care of me. But I was like, you can’t do that, you have to go to bed. Go to sleep. You have to. He was really struggling. So we looked into it and he applied for the Family Leave Act or whatever it is if you have to take care of somebody. So he applied for that.

Lori Ann 1:03:25
He kind of stopped going to work. He was just starting to make a name for himself at this company that he was with. He loved it. That was his dream job. He was finally moving up and meeting all these people that were the higher ups. At first I was mad. I was like go to work you have to do this, but then I was beyond thankful that he stayed with me because I needed him to ground me almost. I was petrified of every move, you know it was just a blessing.

Lori Ann 1:04:21
I got to have more time with Owen. At those stages I was feeling him a lot more. I learned that he loved avocados because every time I would eat an avocado and he would dance around or whatever. So I mean, I guess he could have hated that too but–

Winter 1:04:49
-He liked avocados.

Lori Ann 1:04:50
I’m gonna go if he likes it. But there was one night too that Matt and I were laying in bed. Then I was like, Oh, he’s moving around a lot. That was one of the first times that Matt was able to feel him give a little kick. We both cried because we’ve waited for that moment for years. It was just so hard to comprehend. l just kept thinking we’ve gone through so much to get to this point. Why is it becoming so difficult to go through it?

Lori Ann 1:05:49
As soon as we got to 23 weeks, and four days, I think it was the high risk doctor was like, “Hey, kid, you made it this far. This is a miracle alone as you’ve done this.” So they put me at the hospital. We knew walking in that that was going to be our home until Owen was born. So in our heads, we were, this is going to be home, we need to pretend we want to be here for a while. Obviously, nobody wants to be in a hospital for a while. But we wanted to be there for a while.

Lori Ann 1:06:43
My friends and family were so amazing. They all sent cards, and I can’t even tell you how many coloring books I got. We pretty much decorated the whole room the nurses would walk in and be like, is this your house? Yeah, you know we wanted to make it feel homey. I had my own pillow. We made it as homey as possible.

Lori Ann 1:07:17
Just because we wanted to keep it positive. We were trying to be as positive as possible at that point. A lot of the doctors were shocked that we even made it from 21 weeks of my water breaking to 24 weeks. So every day after that was a blessing because it doesn’t usually happen that way.

Winter 1:07:46
You knew that? Did you guys know that you were going to be admitted into the hospital? If you made it to 24 weeks and just monitor you and maybe even if needed they would induce? What was the plan from there?

Lori Ann 1:08:03
Us signing ourselves into the hospital at 24 weeks was us saying to the doctors that we want to take every life saving measure possible to save Owen. That meant I was not going to be able to do a natural delivery. I would have to have a C-section no matter what. Because if I started having contractions I wouldn’t have time to go through labor. He would have to come out quick if we wanted to save him.

Lori Ann 1:08:47
If I got an infection, then it would be an emergency C-section and they would take him out as quick as possible. They would perform life saving measures to try and save him at that point. So that’s what we were signing up for when we went back in at 24 weeks.

Lori Ann 1:09:10
There were more options, they still said that we could terminate at any point. Some people just waited at home until something happened. But at the hospital, they gave me steroid shots. They had me on really high doses of antibiotics. They monitored Owen twice a day for at least an hour. To make sure his heart rate was okay and that he wasn’t in any distress. The only time that I wouldn’t have a say about anything would be if I had an infection and if he was showing any signs of distress. That would be the time when they would have to take him out.

Lori Ann 1:10:08
So for the first couple days, I couldn’t even leave my room. I couldn’t leave the bed. Couldn’t, they didn’t want me to move at all. The first week has been spent being in the same room in the same bed for so long you go crazy. There’s only so much you can do. Then you just overthink. I did a lot of coloring. That is definitely for sure.

Lori Ann 1:10:48
My friends were amazing, because a lot of people came to visit me. All my co-workers came, my boss came and she visited me. My family came and they kept me busy. The people knew that I had two dogs, and I miss them terribly. So the liaison person made it a point that if there was ever a service dog in the hospital they made a special trip to come and see me.

Winter 1:11:28
That is awesome.

Lori Ann 1:11:29
Yeah it was very sweet. So gradually I graduated to being able to be wheeled around the maternity ward. I couldn’t leave the maternity ward, but I could be wheeled around that area. But that didn’t last very long. Because that’s a very hard place to be in, when you’re going through something like that. Because everybody has their babies and they’re all happy. It was really rough.

Lori Ann 1:12:13
So I spent a lot of time in one room for a while. But the doctors every day, we’re this is great, you’re doing great. He is a feisty one. Despite not having a lot of room. He’s doing those flips. He was running away from them every time they had to put the monitor on him. I can remember the one time the nurse, it took her 20 minutes to finally get them to stay in one spot. Then she walked out and I have it on video actually. He kicked it. It literally fell down my stomach.

Lori Ann 1:13:06
He hit it so hard.

Winter 1:13:08
That is awesome.

Lori Ann 1:13:10
The monitor just slid down my stomach. Yeah, so I mean, there were some good times. Matt got to see him. Sometimes if they’re in one spot your stomach will get hard in that one area. I can’t remember for the first couple of times, I was like, something’s wrong. Why is my stomach bigger on this side? It’s hard. The nurse was like, ah, nope, he’s just chilling up there right now. I mean, that was amusing and I’m just very glad that I got to feel those movements, you know,

Winter 1:14:04
Yeah.

Lori Ann 1:14:05
March 10th, I woke up and I knew something was wrong. I didn’t feel good. I knew I had a fever. You know, when you just have the aches and then I just really didn’t feel well. They came in and I was like, I don’t feel good, something is wrong. They had said that I had a fever. So they automatically hooked me up to the monitor for Owen.

Lori Ann 1:14:53
His heart rate was in the 180s and consistently in the 180, so that’s really high. It shouldn’t be like that. Normally, I would have felt him moving around a lot. I kept saying to them why I don’t feel him. They’re like, okay well, his heart rate. He’s alive. He’s in there. It happened so quickly I didn’t feel well, they noticed that his heart rate was too high. My ob came in and all I can remember is her saying, okay, Lori Ann it looks like today’s the day. It’s a good day to have a baby boy. Let’s get going. It seems like you have an infection. So, you know, he has to come out now.

Lori Ann 1:16:04
I was petrified. I couldn’t hold myself together anymore after that. In the C-section, they were going to allow Matt to come in, because I was going to be awake. As soon as I got into the OR, they had found out that they had just given me my heparin shot, I think it is for blood clots. They were like, you could bleed out, if we keep you awake. We decided that it would be a better option for me to be put out for the C-section.

Lori Ann 1:17:01
Honestly, I wouldn’t doubt it if they just said that because I was freaking out. I couldn’t calm down. I suffer from anxiety, normally. I was on a whole new level of freaking out. I just kept saying, but he’s only 26 weeks. He’s only 26 weeks and it just happened so quick.

Lori Ann 1:17:36
There’s a whole team of people rushing around you, and it was so overwhelming. The amount of people prepping you for a C-section. The doctors are telling me about knocking me out. Then they’re telling me Matt can’t come in. They actually let that in for a second. Just to wish me luck. Then he had to leave.

Lori Ann 1:18:21
It’s all a blur, but I was just petrified. I just remember, all of a sudden, I felt someone grab my hand. I was like, what? I looked over it. I guess it was a doula or something like that. I’m not 100% sure if that’s what she was. She just leaned in next to me, and was just like, Lori Ann you’re going to be okay, we’re going to take care of your baby. She was just so calm, and soothing. I wish I knew who she was, so I could thank her, you know what I mean? She totally helped me in that moment. Just holding my hand at that moment was something I needed.

Lori Ann 1:19:24
Then I was put out and then I woke up and in recovery. I felt so empty. I didn’t feel right. Just the day before I was feeling him and then he’s not there anymore. You know you think you have so much more time. My oxygen levels kept getting messed up. So I had to be in recovery for a little bit longer.

Lori Ann 1:20:20
Matt came down and he showed me a picture of Owen. But, you know, he told me, he came out and he wasn’t breathing. So they did have to intubate. So they did that. They intubated him, and that– I’m sorry, this is where I’m gonna get a little emotional. But Matt said, he opened his eyes. It was looking at him. You don’t realize how tiny a two pound baby is.

Lori Ann 1:21:12
Matt’s like, I’ve never felt so much love. In that moment, I was like when am I gonna see? You know I just wanted to see him. Obviously, I was very glad that Matt was able to, you know, show me some pictures. He had said that, the doctor said that he was doing the best he could it that moment, that, you know, he needed full support to breathe, but everything else was stable, that he was doing well. So that was a breath of fresh air.

Lori Ann 1:22:03
We already knew that it was going to be a long road, after he was born. The doctors weren’t going to be able to tell us how developed his lungs were until after he was born. So after Matt showed me the pictures he’s like, “Do you care if I go back?” I was like, I want you to go back and go be with him. I’m fine. My mom was there.

Lori Ann 1:22:40
My mom sat with me. So, Matt got to go back upstairs and spend some time with him. I finally got back to my room, which they still do in the labor and delivery section. Of course, even though they put that leaf or whatever on the door with the tear drop.

Winter 1:23:06
Yeah.

Lori Ann 1:23:09
I saw I was there. Then they had told me that it wasn’t gonna be until later that night because he was born at 12:06pm. So they said that I wasn’t going to be able to see him until at least later that night, because I had to relax and recoup from the C-section. My oxygen was still a little off.

Lori Ann 1:23:43
They had brought in a breast pump because I did say that I wanted to breastfeed. So they wanted me to start doing that right away. The nurses literally handed it to me. I’ve never used a breast pump before. She’s like, okay, here it is. I’m like no I need instructions. I have no idea what to do with that thing. So, she was explaining it to me. As she’s explaining it to me, I got a text from Matt.

Lori Ann 1:24:26
He said something, isn’t right? There’s a lot of doctors in here right now. There’s a lot of beeping. They’re hooked up to so many different things when they’re in the NICU. Okay. What’s wrong? He said something about his blood pressure kept dropping and his heart rate kept dropping, but they were giving him medicine for it.

Lori Ann 1:25:06
I’m not even gonna lie. When he sent that my thought was, okay, we knew this was gonna be a long road

Winter 1:25:17
Right.

Lori Ann 1:25:18
That was expected because we knew things could happen. Those things could go wrong. But it never crossed my mind that he would pass away. You know that feeling right? We made it, we made it to 26 weeks, he came out. He was doing so well. We’re gonna get through this, like, we did it. I just felt so sure. For some reason. I don’t know if it was just because I was like, this has to be okay. This just has to be okay.

Lori Ann 1:26:03
Matt eventually came back down to see me. We talked for a little while. Then Matt asked my dad to step outside. I found this out later, but apparently in the parking lot they were talking Matt’s like it’s not good. He said there are so many doctors in there, and they are trying everything that they can. But it’s not good. My dad was just like, okay let’s hope to wait and see.

Lori Ann 1:26:49
Matt didn’t tell me that yet. Because he didn’t– I mean, who knows, I probably would have ripped out everything possible and tried to get to him. I don’t know what I would have done, but Matt came back. He hung out with me because he said they were busy upstairs.

Lori Ann 1:27:09
Then all of a sudden the NICU doctor came in. He had five nurses with him or something. He said that we need to talk and asked if we wanted my parents in there or not. We asked my parents to step outside for the talk and they did. I knew when he came back down, why would he be there? You know what I mean. What would be the reason for him to be there at that point?

Lori Ann 1:27:58
The NICU doctor was amazing. He took my hand. He was so genuine and caring. He took my hands and explained what was happening about his heart rate, his breathing, low blood pressure and explained it all. I’m like, “So he’s dying?” The doctor was like, “Yes.” That is what he’s telling us because they tried every medicine possible to stabilize him I guess, but it just wasn’t working. They just came to the conclusion that his lungs just couldn’t develop enough at that stage.

Lori Ann 1:29:07
So he basically said, we want to get you upstairs now. So you could meet your son, and you can hold him and meet him before he passes away.

Lori Ann 1:29:26
So I’m like, “Let’s go.” It took all those nurses and doctors to try and get me up because I was probably deadweight to be completely honest. I was just like I didn’t know what to do. I was in so much pain from just having a C-section I shouldn’t have even been sitting up like that yet. I had to get from the bed to a wheelchair. They did it pretty quickly.

Lori Ann 1:30:12
I can remember going out of the room and because we had asked my parents to leave, and I looked to the left, where we came out of the room, and my parents were at the end of the hall. I could see the nurse holding them back a little bit because I was crying. They were rushing us upstairs. So that was very traumatizing for me to see my parents like that. But it’s definitely still something that I still struggle with daily, but we got up to the NICU.

Lori Ann 1:31:20
I heard them say give him a dose of fentanyl or whatever it was. I guess he wouldn’t be in any pain or anything. I guess that’s what helps them pass? You know what I mean? I don’t know, I guess that’s just that.

Lori Ann 1:31:44
Before they did that, we got to hold him. He opened his eyes, and was looking at us. Literally, the first thing I said to Matt was as I was holding him is he is perfect. That’s all I can say. He’s beautiful. He’s so perfect. It was just very hard.

Lori Ann 1:32:30
We are not religious at all, really. We had gotten into a couple of arguments, not arguments- discussions about if we should baptize him or not. We never came to a final conclusion. But when the NICU doctor asked us do you guys want to baptize him before he passes away? We were like, yes. We’re just like there’s no right or wrong answer at this point. If it’s gonna help him it’s gonna help him. If it’s not then it’s not. Just do it. At that point that’s kind of how we felt. So we’re like, Yes.

Lori Ann 1:33:31
I don’t know how, but the NICU doctor, I guess, is qualified to do that. He did it for us. So it’s not even that we had to wait for the priest or whatnot to come. So he did that. Then again, they eventually just took out his, he was intubated. So they just pulled out his tube. We just held him and told him how much we loved him.

Lori Ann 1:34:27
It’s so weird to think about it. At first I was so afraid to touch him. Because the NICU doctor at one point had told us that their skin can be so sensitive at such a young age. So I was afraid. He was wrapped in a blanket, so I was kind of rubbing the blanket a little bit. The doctor was like you could touch him, you’re not gonna hurt him. He’s your baby you can touch him. I was like, great. After that it was like, okay, like, I’m not gonna hurt so, you know, I got to basically just hold him until he passed away.

Lori Ann 1:35:24
I’m just so glad that he was able to– I’m sure babies at that age can’t see much. But you know what I mean? He had his eyes open. He was looking at us. I’m sure he knew our voices. All he felt right when he was passing was love, and so much love. I am definitely very grateful for that.

Lori Ann 1:35:59
The doctor did confirm, eventually that his heart had stopped. So it took Matt actually a little bit of time to hold him. He kept saying no he didn’t want to at first I was like, you need to hold your son. I know, it’s upsetting. I know it’s hard, but you need to do this. He’s so glad that I pushed him to hold him.

Lori Ann 1:36:40
It was just me and Matt for a little while. Then they asked if I wanted my parents to come up, because they were there. I said, Yes , let them come up and meet Owen. At that point he had passed, but they came upstairs and the look on my dad’s face. When he came in. My dad is not a crier at all. He was crying. It was just so hard to see them upset because obviously I knew how much they wanted to be grandparents. How much they loved him already and how much excitement they had for him and it was gone now. But they got to hold him and meet him. I am grateful for that and so are they. They are very glad that they got to spend some time with him and to see him.

Lori Ann 1:38:16
They let me wash him off. I got to change his diaper. I got to help– they were because you know, they do some photos and everything like that. So I was going to stay for the photos which I do feel we were in that room for a long time. But the timing is so blurry in the instance. I thought we weren’t there very long, but apparently we were there for hours.

Lori Ann 1:38:58
Then my I.V.’s we’re in the wrong place. So when my arms were bent I wasn’t getting my meds. You could tell I was starting to go pale and I was dizzy. They were like okay, I think it’s time for you to heal, you have to go rest now.

Lori Ann 1:39:30
That was really hard to have to leave him and I see the stories of how people got to spend a night or whatever it is with their children. I wish I could do something like that. I didn’t even know that was an option. Maybe the hospital I was at didn’t do that, or maybe they didn’t have a cuddle cot or something like that. Once we left then that was it. That was the last time that I got to see him. Obviously, no time is ever in a situation like that.

Lori Ann 1:40:26
I am grateful for the time that I did get with him. I just wish it was more, but I guess again, it’s probably never would have been enough. Whether it was 3 hours or 24 hours. I don’t think it would have ever been enough.

Lori Ann 1:40:54
I had to go back downstairs. That was pretty much it. That was the last time I saw him. I was at the hospital for two more days. Then they sent me home. The world was updated because of COVID all at the same exact time. That’s the whole thing.

Lori Ann 1:41:30
At first we were almost happy, not happy about COVID obviously, but happy in the sense that Matt and I were kind of left alone. We had that time to lean on each other, grieve together and heal together. Then at the same time I wish I could have had family there more often, but because of COVID and it was hard. Nobody knew anything really by that point about COVID so it was quarantined.

Winter 1:42:19
Yeah.

Lori Ann 1:42:20
Yeah. I mean, that’s pretty much what– we did have him cremated. I am very glad we did that. Now we have him with us every day. I have a necklace and his ashes are in it which is with me every day. I got a tattoo with his name and his footprints. I actually had a jeweler take his handprint and footprint. They literally took these are his actual size and outline of his hand and footprint.

Winter 1:43:18
Those are so sweet.

Lori Ann 1:43:19
Yeah. So I have those every day with me too.

Winter 1:43:26
Did you guys have a memorial service or anything? I know it was right in the height of the closed down because of COVID-19. So-

Lori Ann 1:43:35
I mean we did a little thing with our immediate family. Otherwise we couldn’t because of COVID there really wasn’t an option to do that. I mean, his first birthday was just on March 10. We did have a little get together with my family and my husband’s family. We had a little cake and everything like that. That was nice. That’s always nice. Yeah.

Lori Ann 1:44:19
Lori Ann thank you so much for telling Owen’s story. Is there anything else that you want to remember? Or that you’d like to share about that entire experience?

Lori Ann 1:44:31
I am just very grateful for the time that I did get with him, including when he was growing inside of me. That was a great experience. I am so grateful that I got to see him and hold him. So he felt the love and knew the love. I say he got to see us. He opened his eyes so like, I’m so glad that he got to see us. As he was passing that meant so much to me that I was able to do that.

Winter 1:45:12
Thank you so much Lori Ann, that was such a beautiful story and I’m glad you were able to share Owen with us today.

Lori Ann 1:45:19
Yes. Thank you.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Filed Under: birth story, early neonatal infant death (<7 days), infant death, podcast episode Tagged With: infant loss

08: Scott’s advice to go home together immediately after infant loss

August 15, 2019 by Winter

In this advice podcast episode, dad Scott tells how he and his wife Jan returned home together immediately after her daughter’s death, which was caused by complications of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC).

Disclosure: Some of the links within these show notes are affiliate links, which means that if you choose to make a purchase, we will earn a commission, which helps support our show. This commission comes at no additional cost to you, our wonderful listener!

…

Read More

Filed Under: advice, infant death, podcast episode, postneonatal infant death (28-364 days) Tagged With: advice, eclampsia, infant death, infant loss, infant mortality, NEC, necrotizing enterocolitis

07: Scott’s story of Alice’s birth, eclampsia and necrotizing enterocolitis

August 15, 2019 by Winter

In this birth story podcast interview, dad Scott tells how his wife Jan developed eclampsia at 32 weeks pregnant with their daughter Alice and delivered her via emergency C-section. Because Alice was premature, she was diagnosed with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) and died 55 days later due to complications of NEC.

Disclosure: Some of the links within these show notes are affiliate links, which means that if you choose to make a purchase, we will earn a commission, which helps support our show. This commission comes at no additional cost to you, our wonderful listener!

…

Read More

Filed Under: birth story, infant death, podcast episode, postneonatal infant death (28-364 days) Tagged With: dad interview, eclampsia, infant death, infant loss, infant mortality, NEC, necrotizing enterocolitis

06: Jan’s advice to prep coworkers after infant loss

August 15, 2019 by Winter

In this advice podcast episode, mom Jan tells how she prepared herself and coworkers for her return after her daughter’s death, due to complications of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC).

Disclosure: Some of the links within these show notes are affiliate links, which means that if you choose to make a purchase, we will earn a commission, which helps support our show. This commission comes at no additional cost to you, our wonderful listener!

…

Read More

Filed Under: advice, infant death, podcast episode, postneonatal infant death (28-364 days) Tagged With: eclampsia, grief, infant death, infant loss, infant mortality, NEC, necrotizing enterocolitis

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

We're Winter and Lee Redd. Because of our sweet son Brannan who was stillborn at 38 weeks, we created this place where other moms and dads can share the birth story of their baby that was stillborn or who died in infancy.

Copyright © 2019 Still a Part of Us on the Foodie Pro Theme